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                  <text>·Page-1 0.- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

----Localhriem----

warm Weather returning.. ,
The llvestocJ&lt; safety Index will
hold In · the alert category over
most of Ohlotoday but Increasing
humidities and temperaturess
will put It Into tile danger
category Tuesday afternoon .
Morning and evening hours are
still prefered when working with
or transporting animals . Cooler
air moving over Ohto midweek
will ease heat stress on confined

Patrol probes three accidents
Three weekend accidents were investigated by the
Gallla-Melgs Post, one In Meigs Coun ty and two In Gallla
County .
In Meigs County at 3: 10 a.m ., Saturday, patrol reported
Kenneth White, 28, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, was eastbound on Rt.
248, two and one-half miles east of Rt. 7, when his pickup truck
went off the left side of the highway and landed in a ditch.
White suffered mino r Injuries. He was not treated at the
scene. There was light damage to the vehicle. Patrol charged
White wit h DW).
First Ga llia mishap took place at 8 p.m. Saturday on Rt. 35,
near mile post seven.
Patrol s-aid Greg Bryant, 33, Rt. 2, Patrio t, and Noel Slover,
18, also of Rt . 2, Pa triot , were both headed west. Brya nt , who
was driving a motorcycle, hit the Stover pickup truek from the
rear.
There was no damage lo the pickup and light damage to the
motorcycle. Bryant was cit ed for no motorcyc le endorsement.
He suffered minor Injuries, but was not treated at the scene.
Troopers reported a 9 p.m. s~turday accident Involving one
vehicle on Rt. 588 near mile post 4. Patrol said Matthew
Hasseman , 16, Kanauga , was w&lt;;&gt;stbound on Rt. 588 when his
vehicle went of( the road on a curve, landing In a ditch . The
driver wa s not Injured, but was cited for speed in excess of road
conditions.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions - Anna
Koenig, Racine; Patrova Stegall, Albany.
Saturday Discharges - Leon·
dus Lee, Christina Shaeffer,
Keith Musser, Steven Gray,
Robin Randolph, Charles Payne,
Paul Hudson, Mae Holter, Chester Young, Aretha Snider, De·
borah Faw, Marie Roy.
Sunday Admissions - Monte
Wolfe, Pomeroy; Alfred Birch·
field , Middleport; June Hayman,
Pomeroy; Grace Holter, Pome·
, oy; Paul Hudson, Pomeroy.
Sunday Dlschares :... None.

Landfill to be closed Saturday
The Meigs Count y Landfill will be closed all day Saturday In
observa nce of the J uly Fourth holiday.

Daily stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)

Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis lr Loewl

Post office lists holiday hours
While most of the na tio n will enjoy a long holiday weekend to
celebrate the F'ourth of July,,deli very as usual will be the order
of the day for post offices in the Columbus division on July 3.
"Many of our customers are coun ting on Friday mail delivery
so we will be providing it just like on any othe'r business day,"
say Pomeroy' Post master Jim Soulsby and Middleport
Postmaster Joe Struble.
"Window service will be provided on a limited basis," Souls by
reports.
"Since Sat urday is a holiday, we are basica lly opera ling on
Friday as we would on Sa turday . We will be closing our window
lobbies at noon In Pomeroy and at II:30 a.m. in J\1lddleport on
Friday," he states. Post office lobbies will remain open on the
normal sched ules and vending equipment Is available to make
stamp purchases during the hours when the window is closed.
On Saturday, J uly 4, post offices will be closed. There will be
no window service or delivery on any routes, either city ofrural.
Ex press mail deliveries will be made on the holiday.

Monday, June 29. 1987

Finn
Price
Am Electric Power ........... .. 27'%
AT&amp;T ................ ................. 28%
Ashland Oil ...... ................. .63%
Bob Evans Farms ... ..... ...... 25'1.
Charming Shoppes .......... .... 31%
Federal Mogul ....'................ 44%
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ....... .... ...... 69%
Heck's Inc ......... ...... ............ 4',8
Limited Inc ................... .. ... 44 %
Multimedia Inc ...................... 59
Rax Restaurants .................. 5%
Robbins &amp; Myers ............. ... !O~
Shoney's Inc ...................... .30%
Wendy's Inti. ....................... 9%
Wqrthlngton lnd ... .... .... ....... 22Y.

Weather

Continued from page 1

animals once again.
teens developing today . wJJI
The threat of rain al 0 . .
hamper spraying operations.
southwest winds w' JJ ng With
e 1nto the

Squads make l 0 runs over weekend
Ten calls were answer by local
units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Services reports.
Sunday calls Included: 3:33
a.m ., Racine took James Hinckley from Trouble Creek Road to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 9:38a .m., extl'rtgulshed a
junk yard fire on Route 124;
Racine at 12:27 p.rh. took Cassie
Hudson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 3:22 p.m.
took Grace Holter from the
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at
5:17p.m. took Bill Hudson from
Wright St. to 'veterans Memorial.
At 5:30 a.m .. Saturday, Pome·

roy took Connie Peters from
Spring Avenue to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 2: 33 p.m.
took Patrova Stegall from Route
681 to Veterans Memorial;
Pomeroy extinguished a brush
fi re on county road 25 at 2:36
p.m. ; at 6:27p.m., Pomeroy took
Rusty Smith from Second St. to
Veterans Memorial, and a 9:05
p.m. Careflight from Dayton
took James Wooten to Ohio State
University Hospital. Officials
said that Wooten was injured in a
motorcycle accident and was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by private vehicle be·
fore being removed by plane to
the Columbus Hospital.

Ohio Lottery

Conners

South Central Ohio
Increasing cloudiness today,
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms and highs near 85.
Variable cloudiness tonight and
Tuesday, with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows tonight will be In tliemld60,
with highs Tuesday In the upper
80s .
The probability of preclplta·
lion is 30 percent today and
tonight and :50 percent Tuesday.
Winds will be from the southw·
est at 10 to20 mph today and from
the southwest at five to 15 mph
tonight.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday throu&amp;h Friday
Fair Wednesday, with a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms Thursday and Friday.
Highs will range from the upper
70s to the !lllddle 80s. Overnight
lows wlll range from the mid 50s
to the mid 60s.
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Daily Number
442 .

Wimbledon -

Pick 4

Page 4

9183

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Vol .37, No.39
Copyrighted 1987

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By LEE LEONARD
UPJ Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP! ) -Ohio's gasoline tax
will Increase by almost three cents a gallon
Wednesday, and the state's minimum beer·
drinking age will go from 19 to 21at the end of July.
The Ohio House ratified a Senate-passed
highway maintenance and construction appropri·
atlon containing those provisions Tuesday and
sent the $2.4 billion spending measure to Gov.
Richard F. Celeste.
Celeste has already committed himself to
signing the bill, which will be law by the start of
the new two-year fis cal period Wednesday.
The gasoline tax will go from 12 cents a gallon to
14.7 cents immediately , and may rise aga in by up

A Lawrence County teenager was killed Saturday morning
when the tractor he was driving overturned on his father's farm
near Lecta.
Dallas W. Wa tson, 16, Route 1. Crown City was killed when the
trac tor flipped over on a hill , according to the Lawrence County
Sheriff's Department. Wa tson had just returned home from a
church campout and was goi ng to get some water when the
acciden t occured at 7:30a.m.
Watson is the son of Betty and Hollis Wilson of Turkey Creek
Road.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. In(.

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help with their highway needs.
Officials of the Ohio Department of Transportation said the state will be able to resurface about
1,500 miles of highways and repair 210 bridges.
Normal goals for the two-year period are 1,900
miles of repaving and 390 bridges.
The beer-drinkin g age Is being ra ised at th~
insistence of the federal governments, which has
threatened to withhold about $42 million worth of
Ohio's road funds unless the age Is Increased to 21.
South Dakota lost a U.S. Supreme Court· case
last week. upholding the federa l law permitting
the withholding of fund s.
Teenagers who turn 19 by July 31 will be able to
continue drinking beer lega lly under the law.
Younger ones wiii have to walt until they are 21.

to elght·tenths of a cent next Marc h 1 and each
year thereafter until 1993.
However, under a formula based on gasoline
sales and highway construction costs, tra nsporta·
lion officials believe the tax will increase by only
about one-half cent per year.
Lawmakers said that will put Ohio in a
. competitive situation with surrounding states and
enable the state to take In an extra $260 million to
help with repaving roads and rebuilding bridges.
The tax on gasoline In Michigan, Indiana and
Illinois Is about !8.5cents a gallon. It is 17.4cents
in Pennsylva nia, 15 cents In Kentucky and 15.35
cents In West VIrginia.
Local governments will receive $84 million of
the extra tax money during the two-year period to

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VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

James (Jim) Miller resigned
his position as principal of Meigs
High School when the Meigs
Local School District Board of
Education met In special session
at the ceniral office In Middleport Monday afternoon.
Miller, who has been principal
at the high school for the past fi ve
years, gave boa rd members and
administrators a copy of his
letter of resignation which was
read by Supt. Dan E. Morris. Th e
letter Indicated tha t the reslgna·
tion, 3ubmitt ed with regret, is
effective Aug. I and requested
remuneration for accr ued unused vacation . The fou r board
members present for the special
session unanimously approved
the resignallon and pay ment for
unused vacation time. Board
members present were Robert
Snowden , La rry Rupe, Dick
Vaughan and Robert Barton .
There was no discuss ion with
Miller on the resignation or his
future plans on the part of the
board and the letter of res lgna·
tlon did not Indicate his plans .

"WE HAVE HEARINC AIDS"
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

Early deadline for weekend

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Area deaths
Cassie

J, Hudson

Cassie J. Hudson, 79, Midd le·
port, Ohio, di ed Sunday, Aprll 28,
1987 1n Veterans Memori al Hospital , Pomeroy, Ohio.
Born Feb. 21, 19081n An tiquity,
Ohio. she was the daught er of the
latr Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Adams.
She att ended the Rutland
!Ohio) Bible Methodist Church.
Her hu sba nd, Dewey W. Hudson, preceded her In deat h In
1985. She was also prect-ded In
·l~a th by three sons, Dewey .Jr.,
, Qhn Robert and Churlcs H.
S ur vivl n ~: arc four da ughters.
Mrs. Guy (Muriel Bush. Pomeroy, Mrs. Sherman !Margaret)
Williams, Middlepo rt, Mrs. KPn·
neth 1Donn a1 Ebli n, Ru tl and ,
Ohio, and Mrs. La ura Autherson ,
Tuppers Plains, Ohto; five sons,
George of Rutland , Denver of
Norton. Ohio. Lewis of Haclne.
Ohio and Bernard and Son n}',
both of Middleport; one sister,
Mrs. Nellie Rice. East Liverpool.
Ohio; 19 ~randc h l lclrc n , 29 great grand child ren and one great ·
great ·gra nddaught er.
F'uneral wlll bc at I p.m.
Wed nesday at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Amos Tillis off icia ting. Burial
wlll follow In Gra ham Cemetery.
Friends ma y ca ll at the fu neral
home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m . Tuesday.

Jamt&gt;S Criss
James G. Criss. 8ti. died
Saturday evening at his rest·
dence In Torch:
He wa s born July J l, 1900 in
Tyler County, W.Va., a son oft he
late Albert and Lydia Pointer
Criss. He was a retired W&lt;'lder
with the Baltimore and Ohio
Railroad and was a member of
the Brotherhood of Maintenance
Organization .n
Surviving are his wife, Faye E.
Barrows Ct·tss; a son and
daughter· In -law, Glenn and Jean
Criss, Columbus; a daughter,
Geraldln~ Criss, West VIrginia;
a sister. Elva Ward, Fostoria;
two sisters and brothers·ln·law,
Verna and Horace Miller, Fostoria, and Minta and Harold
Rainey, Arcadia; 13 grandchild·
ren, 21 great-grandchildren and
several nieces, nephews and
cousins.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by his first
wife, Edna Orr Criss; a son , Ted
Criss; a daughter, June Criss.
i

and two sis ters, Mollie Keener
und Erma Tripp.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville with Rev.
Se ldon .Johnson offlclatl n ~ . Bur·
ial will br in Torch Cemet&lt;&gt;ry.
Friends may call at the fun eral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
today.

TANKS- The Reagan admlnstrallon has
agreed In P.rlnclpal to the production by Egypt of

the U.S.·lAI battle tank. The tank shown above Is
In Ft. Hood, Te-as. (UJ'J)

U.S., Egypt reach tentative
agreement on tank production

Andy Do('zi
Andy Oliver Doczi, Jr. , 52,
Titus Road , Middleport, died
ea rly Monday morning at the
Holze r Medical Cent er aft er an
extended Illness .
Bor11 on April 10. 1935, In
Lorado, W. Va . he was the son of
Ruby Mills Doczl of Lorado and
the late Andy Oli ver Doczl, Sr.
and a retired coa l mtner.
He was. a vetera n of the U. S.
Marine Corps and a member of
the Dexter Star Grange, Middle·
port Lodge 263, F. and A. M.. a
32nd degree Mason, Ancient and
Accep ted Scottish Rites, Valley
of Columbus, the Aladdin Temple
Shr ine, Columbus, Pomeroy
Chapter 80, Bosworth Councll46,
Ohio Valley Commandry 24, and
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern Star. He a ttended the
Freewill Baptist Chur ch,
Rutland.
Besides his mother he is
surv ived by his wife. Charlene, a
daughter and son:in-law, Jack·
lyn and Paul Searls, Langsville,
a son and daughter-in· law, Andy
Oliver IV and Barbara Doczl,
and two other sons, Pvt. Todd
Doczl. statloncd at Good Fellow
Air F'orce Base in San Angelos,
Texas, and William Dwayne
Doczl. Rutland.
Also surviving are four grand ·
sons, Andy Oliver Doczl V, Adam
Christopher Doczl, Middleport,
and Paul Shannon and Levi
Daniel Searls, Langsville; five
brothers, Joseph and James
Doczl. Lorado, W.Va., and John
and David Doczl. Mannassas,
Va . and George, Madison, N . J .;
a sister. Eva Rose Harter.
Perryburg; and his mother and
lather·ln·law, Haskell and
Blanche Toppings, Huntington,
w. Va .
Friends may call at the
Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
Home Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Masonic services will be
held at the funeral home at 7:30
p.m. Funeral services wUI be
held at 12 noon Wednesday at the
funeral home with the Rev. Paul
Taylor officiating. Burial will be
In the Highlands Memory
Gardens, Pecks MW, W. Va :

26 Cents

New~paper

Ohio's minimum drinking age for wine and
liquo r already is 21. Ohio voters in 198:! rejected a
proposa l to raise the beer· drinking age to 21 as a
highway safety measure.
The highway ap propriation also phases out a
tax cred it for the production of ethanol as an
additive for gasoline.
Transportal ion officials say the credit costs the
stat e $34 million to $50 million in road money,
wh ich 11 can ill afford to lose.
Under the bill, the 25 cent a gallon credit will be
reduced to 20 cent s in 1989 and 1990, and to 15 cents
the following two years. It will end In 1993.
The highway bill also permits counties to tack
on up to $15 in motor vehicle license fees, which
also go for road Improvement s.

Meigs principal resigns post

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

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1 Section, 10 Pages
A Multimedia Inc.

Drinking age, gas tax bills ratified by House

Youth killed
in tractor accident
I

Deadline for fea ture copy, weddings, engagements, anniversaries, far m and business page news for the Jul y 4 holiday
weekend edi tion Is noon Wednesday.
The July 4 holid ay Times-Sentinel edition will be published at
1 p.m. Saturday Instead of the normal time In order to permit
Ohio Valley Publishing Co., employees to observe part of the
Ju ly Fourth holiday.
The display advertising deadline for the weekend edition is 4
p.m. Thursday.
The Tribune business office will be open until noon Saturday.
The Sentinel business office will be closed all day.

Thunderstorms or showers
tonight and tomorrow. Low
tonight near 65 and the high
tomorrow near 80.

en tine

Pomeroy-'-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. June 30, 1987

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STORMY

By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON i UPI I
Slrong congressional opposition
erupted against an administra tion proposal to allow Egypt t.o
co- produce the M·l , th&lt;' most
sophisticated tank In the U.S.
arsenal.

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Concerns Involve not only
foreign policy questions but also
the issue of America n jobs beca use the tank is currently
built In Lima. Ohio. and Warren,
Mich., by General Dynamics
Corp., whic;t has a $3.5 billion
contract for 3,299 ofthe$1 million
ar mored vehicles.
"We must protect American
technology and that means keep·
lng wea pons produ ction here In
the Unit ed States," Sen. Howard
Met zenbaum, D·Ohlo, said Mon·
day after the State Department

co nf ir med the preliminary
agreement .
"! will oppose the decision to
allow the M-1 to be built in Egypt.
It would cost Ohioans jobs and
there Is no reason to build
American wea pons abroad when
they can be built In Ohio and
other states," Metzenbaum said.·
Sen. Jo hn Glenn, D·Ohio and a
member of the Armed Services
Committee, agr eed that produc·
tion of the sophisti cated ta nk
"s hould remain solely l'n U.S.
hands,'' adding, "I believe that a
majorit y of th e Congress will
agree with me .
" While this proposal might
boost Egypt's self· image and
en hance Its standin g in the Arab
world," Glenn said, "It appear s
to me that Egypt might have far
better uses for the $1.3 billion In

foreign military sales money
that It receives from the United
States than to spend it on tank
production ."
Congress could attempt to
block the deal, and one Capitol
Hill source said Monday, " It 's a
Pentagon Idea that hasn't been
thought through and there are a
lot of ques tions and doubts."
In confirming the preliminary
agreement , the State Department said General Dynamics has
-been granted a munitions license
to discuss "som&lt;&gt; form" of
co- produ ction with Egy pt. At ·
tempting to ease concerns, de·
partment spokesman Charles
Redman said, "Sensitive tech·
nologies will be protected and
will not be manufactured In
Egypt."

However , Su pt . Morris indicated
that Miller will b&lt;' employed in
Pa uld ing County. Miller was
granted a two year contract for
the principa l's post last fall.
The board voted unanimously
to issue a short term note, at one
percent int erest, in the amount of
$228.000 from the bond retirement· fund. This will be a loan to
the district as autho rized by the
state. Repayment must be made
by Dec. 31. this year, and money
for that repayment will come
from the October tux settlement.
Treasurer .J ane Frye reported
that the district will end the
current fis ca l year with a cash
bala nce of $8,000. The board
adopted temporary appropriatIons for the 1987·88 fiscal year,
about 25 percent of the amount of
money being expended during
the current fiscal year. The
temporary .,appropriations pro·
vides $1,706,01!1.27 as general
tunc moneys and a total of
$2,099,632.43 for overall expend!'
tures including t h.e lleneral fund .
A permanent appropriations re·

solution must be approved by
Oct, I for the 1987·88 fiscal year.
The board acce pted the resignations of Rusty Bookman as
boys' reserve basket ball coach
and Roger Fost.er as girls'
reserve basketball coach. Both
res ignations are effective as of
June 23, this year. Kathy Reed
was employed as a home eco·
nomlcs teacher at Meigs High
School for· the upcoming school
yea r.
A resolution authorizing the
Meigs Local Dlslrtct to partlcl·
pate In the drug-free schools
project for 1987·88. Supt. Morris
explained that the district has a
$6,786 [cderal grant, given
through the sla te, w\th which to
take part In the program. The
program will cover a three year
period with the first year to be
used In the development of the
curr iculum and securing mate,
ria ls neede~ for l!1Jpiementatlon.
Also present for the m'if'tlng
was Asst. Supt. James Carpenter
and Asst. High School Prtnclpal
Fenton Tay lor .

Southern Local S·chool Board
approves 87-88 appropriation
An appropriation of $4 ,321,005
for fiscal year 1987·88 has been
approved by the Board of Education, Southern Loca l School
District.
The appropriation include
$3,735,130, ge neral fund ; $38,500
on retirement; $182,555, lunchroom; $14,000 uniform supply;
$43,173, principa ls' funds ;
$4.3,626, student managed fund s
1class fund, yearboo k newspaper, etc.); $71,!117, district
managed fu nds tall athletic
related activities); $3.3,345, dis·
advantaged pupil progra m fund ;
$2,327, Tille 2; $37, 1~ 6. Title 68 ;
$108,422, Cpap ter I reading pro·
gram; and $784, drug free school
grant.
In other action taken at. the
meeting held Sa turday night at
the high school, the board in·
creased substitute teacher pay
from $50 to $60 a day, and
Increased substitute tutoring

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from $10 to $12.50 per hour .
Coac hes hired were Darrell
Dugan, assistant varsit y football
coach: William Hoback. reserve
foot ball; Ernest Spencer, junior
high football; ,Jay Rees, boys
reserve baske tball; Ronald
Quil len, fres hman bas ketball.
Kathy Cummings was hired as
junior high checr lead~r adv isor .
Remedia l reading proj ects to
be carr ied out with Chapter I
funding for the school year were
app~oved , and It was agreed that
the Southen Local School District
will participat e In the Sou theast·
ern Ohio Special Educa tion Re·
glonal Resource Center for the
year at a cost of 70 cen ts per
st udent.
Bids accepted w rc for fire
ex tinguis her service, Brown's
Fire and Safety Eq uipment,
Rutland; coal, Excelsior Salt
Works. Pomeroy; office machine
malnt enanee, Bes t Office Ma-

:I

chines, Belpre; tires and tubes,
Meigs Tire Center, Pomeroy;
diary products, Valley Bell of
Pont Pleasant; No. 2 fuel oil,
gasoline, and di esel fuel, U.S. Oil
Co. , Ga llipolis; bakery products,
Storck; and lrozen novelties,
Mic hael's Ice Cream, Jackson.
Roof repairs at the Portland
Elementary School and the kindergarten bulding at Racine
were approved. The resignations
or Sue Grace as a substitute
teacher and Debra Roush as
principal of th e Let art Falls
School were accepted. The treas·
urer was authorized to join the
Ohio Association of School Bust·
ness Officials, apd approval was
given to the Boosters to put up a
chain link fe nce on the softball
field at their expense.
In other action at the meeti ng,
William A. Young II , Rayanne
Yo ung, and .J nnl Lynn Stewart
Cont inued on .:1

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A yellow poges ad can be just a name and
a phone number, but isn't there more to
your business than that? Don't sell yourself
short. Show your stuff. Customers want to
l~now more than a phone number.
·
They wont to know about
your business. So show your

hours in your ad. Maybe a map. Brand
names and credit terms. In todoy's business
world, it's information that
sells. Ameritech PogesPius.®
The original Ohio 13ell
Yellow Pages. Call us toll
free: 1~2-9190

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Eastern board selects /(arr
Ray Karr, of Chester, was
appointed Monday night to fill a
vaca ncy on the Eastern Local
Board of Education.
The board, meeting In special
session, reviewed Karr' s quallfl·
cat Ions before making the ap·
polntment. Karr will fill the
remainder of the term of Jim
Caldwell, who earlier resigned
from the board. Th e term expires
Dec. 31.
Severa I other Items of business
were also finalized In Monday
night 's meeting.
Following an executive session
on personnel matters, the board
passed a motion to reinsta te
extended service contracts for
Tom Kelly, guidance counselor;
James Huff, librarian and fed ·
eral programs' coordinator; and
Janice Weber, In the home
economics department. The eX ·
tended service contracts are for
20 days. A sal at;' schedule tor the
20.day contracts Is to be adOpted

by the board at a later date.
per student; and the SEO·
In addition, a n extended ser- SERRC program for special
vice contract for Brian Windon. education services at a cost of
In the. vocational agriculture approximately $. 70 per student.
department, was changed fr om SEO·SERRC partlcl pa tlon is
state reimbursed on a pupil
20 half days to 20 full days.
Extended service contracts percentage basts.
The board, which Is currently
were originally cut by the board
as part, of an overall budget Involved In secu ring a hi gh
cutting process. However, the school principal for the school
board was not advised at the time district, will be meeting In
the contracts were cut that a special session at 10 a.m. on July
large percentage of the extended 3 to discuss personnel, and agaln
service salaries would be reim- on July 8 at 4 p.m. for a parent
bursed by the state, with only hearing and discussion of flnan·
minimum costs to the local ces and personnel.
The regular July meeting will
board.
be
held 7:30p.m. on July 30.
A two-year contract, beginning
Present
for Monday's meeting
July 1, for20-hoursperweek, was
approved by the board for Joan! were board president Susie
Heines , boardinembers Roger
Sellers as assistant treasurer.
Also, the board approved year- Gaul, James Smith and Kathy
end appropriations' adjustments Manlcke, Superlnlendent Rl·
and 1987·88 participation In the chard Roberts, Principal Dan
SEOVEC special services pro· Apllng, County Superintendent
gram; educational television John Riebel and Eloise Boston,
program at a cost of S.35 to S.40 clerk-treasurer.
I

.-

- ·- ·-·---__.;;._

NEW CARI,'ET - Dr. and Mrs. Harold Brown,
· Pomeroy, have donated the carpeting for
Ppmeroy Elementary School's Robert B. Morris
Ubrary and Media Center. Mrs. Brown watched
for awhile u Mike Younl{ and Larry Walker of
•\

Pomeroy Installed the carpeting In the school on
Saturday momlnJ. Jobn Lisle, school principal, .
expects the library-media center to be completed
by fall.

�, ·.

.
·
entary
Comm
.
,
The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEV&lt;ri'ED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEJGS·MASON AREA

~lb

B m~
~v

,.,...,__,._..,....~d. t=t

ROBERT L, WINGE'M'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
A881alant PubiL~her/C ontroller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and ttle American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION 1ii-e. welcome They shOJld l:r le-ss than lXI words
long. All IPtlers are subject to editing and mJ.St be signed with name, addrt&gt;Ss and
tel~_&gt;phonl.' number. No Wlslgn~ letters will ~~: bUshed . Le11ers should be In
good ta ste, addressin g Issues , not personalities .

:Sex and politics:
No new deal
WASHINGTON - The question Is heard, "Why did the press
suddenly decide to start reporting abo uI the sex lives of politicians?"
That Inquiry often Is followed by another question, "How come you
s ingled out Gary Hart and never wrote about the extramarital alia irs
of John Kennedy. Dwight Eisenhower or Franklin D. .Roosevelt?"
The answer to the first question Is simple: The press did not
suddenly decide to start reporting on the sex lives of politicians.
In fact, the American press has been doing this kind of reporting for
more than 150 years, going back to Thomas Jefferson If not George
Washington, although there does seem to be some kind of cycle for
popularity of such stories.
To the personal knowledge of the writer, there were cont emporary
rumors sod gossip about both JFK and Ike during their presidencies,
but nothing speci fic was published about their actvilies until after
they left the White House or died. Why? Because most of the
information was unsubstantiated or because editors did not want to
print or broadcast such stories at the time.
As for FDR, It has been said there were press people who were
awa re of the paraplegic president's continuing relationship with his
wile's former secretary, but again there Is no record of stories.
But considering the kind of off·color stories that were openly
circulated about the Roosevelt family during FDR's four terms, It
would be amazing If there was no gossip about the president's sex life.
If the press ignored politicians' hanky-panky in the relatively
recent past, that does not mean it was always so. Jefferson's claimed
long·term relalionship with slave Sally Hemmings; A,ndrew
Jackson's bigamous : marriage; Grover Cleveland 's illegilimate
child; Warren Harding's ex tramar it al affairs- all were grist for the
press of the lime.
Furthermore. the cycle of these stories hardly could be said to have
begun with Hart. The bedroom antics of a long list of politicians,
ranging from Adam Clayton Powell to Wayne Hays, Wilbur Mills,
Dan Crane and John Jenrette, has been In the news at various times In
the last 25 years.
In any case, the press did not single out Hart. Hart singled out Hart.
Many of the politicians mentioned above have been indiscreet about
their affairs, showing up In places where they were likely to be well
known with their ladles.
But no one In living Washington memory has 111 publicly denied
sexual misconduct, 12) chalienge&lt;l ,the press to check it out by
following him around, and (3) showed up In public within weeks with a
young woman not his wife.
None of the foregoing is intended to make the argument that
reporling on the bedroom capers of politicians Is the highes t
expression of the First Amendment's guarantee of a fr ee press.
·That argument could better be made for the performance of the
press in pursuing the Iran arms·Conlra aid sca ndal. in monitor'lng
Congress's struggles with the budget deficit or In blrd·dogging the
painfully long process of U.S.-Soviet arms co ntrol nego tiations.
The press also covers those relatively unse nsalional s tories, and
generally they are in your dally paper. If you want to test the
effec tiveness of that work. ask your neighbor how the Gramm·
Rudma n process is progressing In Washington or the START talks
are doing in Geneva.
.Did you get a blank look? Try, "Who is Donna Rice?"

Berry's World

•

•

Today
In history
.

:
By United Press International
!!'oday Is Tuesday, June 30, the 181st day of 1987 with I84 to follow.
l'he moon Is waxing. moving toward Its first quarter.
111e morning stars are Venus and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They In dude
El}glish socialist leader Harold Laski In 1~3. film director Howard
Hawks In 1896, actress Susan Hayward and drummer Buddy Rich in
1917, singer Lena Horne In 1917 (age 70). and singer Florence Ballard
of:'J'he Supremes In 1943.

•

On nits ilate in history:
In 1870, Ada Ke(!ley became the first woman to graduate !rom an
a~redlted law school In the United States - Union College of Law In
C!Ocago.
In 1924, the "Teapot Dome" scandals resulted in the lndlctmeni of
Inferior Secretary Albert Fall and oilmen Harry Sinclair and Edward
DciJ!eny. All three were charged with bribery and conspiracy to
defraud the government In the leasing of naval oil reserves In
wjomlng and California.
·
l)l1936, Margaret Mitchell's Civil War novel "Gone With the Wind"
was published.

.

Tuesday. JOO. 30. 1987

~:-r:v-=-~~=~~~·

-~----------~----------------'----------------T~~~~._Y·.J-~~30-·-·-19•~-7--

Marriage license issued

nlflcant Involvement by Bush in
There's not a word in the
the mess could doom his 1988 record, however, indicating that
chances.
Bush uttered any warning or
Like any vice president going misgiving about the Initiative.
for the top job, Bush has stressed Nor is there evidence that he did
his " Insider" status In the much in support of it, beyond
declsion·maklng process' during submitting a mell')orandum de·
the Reagan administration . tailing a meeting he had in
Beyond that, though, Bush has Jerusalem last July with an
made it clear that he considers Israeli official. At no point Is
foreign policy his strong suit - to there the faintest suggestion that
the point of condescension during Bush gave the While House the
the debate with Rep. Geraldine benefit of his extensive expeFerraro In 1984.
rience in foreign policy, ciandes·
Yet oddly eno ugh, In the tine operations or domestic
admi nistratio n's foreign policy politics.
planning generally, and the JranThe activities of Bush's na·
cotra "initia tive" particularly, tiona! security adviser, Donald
Bush has been The Little Man Gregg, have come under com·
Who Wasn't There. He often sat mittee scr untlny, and he is
In on the high-level meetings that expected to testify. Bush had to
dealt with the Iran deal, and as a revise his account of Gregg's
former CIA director his opinions meetings with a one- time CIA
sho uld have carried some operative - who also met three
weight. But as far as the record times with Bush .:_and the topics
shows, Bush's principal contrlbu· . they discussed.
lion was not exper tise but
In addition, committee sources
Invisibility.
told us there · is a damning
!loth Secretary of State George document that Involves Bush
Shult z and Defense Secretary more deeply in tlte scandal. It Is a
Caspar Weinberger voiced their revealing memo that was placed
opposition to the misguided ven· In Bush's briefing book before a
lure- and there's documentary crucial meeting on his schedule.
evidence to prove it . Even John
The sources would not divulge
McMahon, ttien deputy director the memo's contents, or even say
of the CIA. opposed the pian. And whether It involved the Iranian
one of the most active partie!· or Nicaraguan connection. But
pants, former national security one source did say this: "Bush
adviser Robert McFarlane wiii have a hard time wriggling
' out of this one. Either he' ll have
came to
it .

... THIS UNIQUE?

FAWN MALl. ~~N

MS THe ABILITY
TO CARRY' rP:uAfNl's
INSI~ life DR@SS

WITHOUT ALT@RING

ITs FleVRe.

Suit filed in Common Pleas

to say he dido 't read the briefing,
in which case be looks like a lazy
lightweight -or he'll say he did,
and then have to explain why he
later denied having this
knowledge.''
Before the vice president is :
placed on the griddle, directly or •
Indirectly, the future of the'
lame·duck president wiii be dealt'
with, · and Ollie North is the ·
witness who will have the grea-'
test impact on President Rea-:
gan. A!\lde from the obvious
questions raised by the first ·
round of hearing witnesses, here .
are some that should draw ·
interesting responses from :
North:
- On t he day HaHian
President-for·llfe Jean-Claude .
Duvaller fled for his life, why was ·
North so convinced that Duvaller
may have stolen some of North's .
contra money from a 'key bank
account?
·
- Did North, as he bragged in
early 1986. secretly mastermind
a Customs Service Sting" that .
nabbed 17 people In an alleged
conspiracy to sell arms to Iran?
If so, did he do It to eliminate
competition for his own arms·
for-hostages deal?
-What does North know about
the pivotal role played by the late
CIA director, William Casey?
Was It Casey who suggested
diverting profits from Iranian
arms sales to the CIA-backed
co ntras? Did Casey ever reveal
that In 1983 he had persuaded the
Saudis to make donations to the
contras from profits of their own
ultra-secret arms sales to Iran
that year?
- Why didn't North, whose .
boss Poindexter was a Navy
admiral, ever tell the Navy of his
secret arms sales to Iran? As we
reported, the Navy in an honest
effort to save money, was dicker·
lng to buy back some aircraft
testing equipment sold to Iran
under the shah. But the Navy ,
broke off the negotiations when
Iran asked for missiles In return.
Was North afraid a straightfor·
ward Navy/ Iran deal would
queer his own sale of missiles to
Tehran?
.
- ·Finally, when Attorney ·
General Edwin Meese In No· :
vember asked all agencies to .
report any dealings with Iran,
why didn't North report what he
knew about the Navy's aborted
effort?

.Debbora Borah, in care of Russell Mozingo, Rutland, has suit
in Meigs County Common Pleas Court against Russell Borah,
Breman, charging domestic, violence. The c:ourt has Issued a
restraining order against the defendant.

Marriage dissolution filed
•

Bruce E. Conde, Pomeroy, and Diana L. Conde, Middleport,
have filed for a dissolution of marriage In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
·
Judy Wise and Dennis Wise have been granted a dissolution of
marriage.

Emergency runs reported
, Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Monday; Tuppers Plains at 8: OS.a.m. to Reedsville for Dorothy
Chevalier to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 5: 26 p.m. to
Flatwoods Road for Albert Goegleln to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Rutland at 7:46p.m. to Corn Holiow Road for Dantelle Thomas
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 11: 23 p.m. to Dorcas
for Wendell Clark to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Guest speaker named at church

14

Rev, Bruce Hawthorn wUI be guest speaker at Rutland Bible
Methodist Church on Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. Rev.
Hawthorn operates a home for alcoholics in Barberton, Ohio.
Pastor Amos Tillis Invites the public.

Lodge meeting changed
The regular meeting of HarrlsonvUie Lodge 411 will be
changed from Saturday July 4 to Saturday July 11 at 7:30p.m.
All masons are welcome.

Legion post meeting set
Racine Legion Post 602 will meet In regular session 7 p.m.
Thursday. Refres!lments will be served following the meeting.

Swimming les5ons slated
London Pool will be offering their second session of swlmmln
lessons starting Monday July 6. Intermediate, swimmer and
advanced swimmer classes will start at 9 a.m. Advanced
beginner will start at 10 a.m. and beginner classes at 11 a.m.,
Children must be at least three-years·old to participate. A
parenHbt water adjustment class will being at 11:45 a.m. All
lessons are $12. To register, contact London Pool at 992-9909 or
Heidi Cobb at 992-34tl2.

Area deaths
Thursday at the Hope Bapitst
Eugia Johnson
Chapel, Grant St.•, Middleport ,
Eugia Johnson, 84, 695 Oliver with the Rev . Dave Bryant, the
St., Middleport. formerty of Rev. Cliff Coleman and the Rev,
Mason, W.Va .. died Tuesday Jerry Scott officiating.
Burial will be in Graham
following a lengthy Illness.
.
Cemetery,
Graham Station,
Born Eugla Roush on Feb. 9,
W.Va.
Friends
may call at the
1903, in t~e Vernon Community,
Foglesong
Funeral
Home In
Letart, W.Va., she was the
daughter of the late Samuel Mason from 3 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday.
Clayton and Olga Lewis Roush .
In addition to her parents, she Cas8ie
Hudson
was preceded In death by her
husband, James Edward John·
Cassie J . Hudson, 79, Middleson; a sister, Enola Brown; a port, died Sunday at Veterans
grandson, John Stewart, and a Memorlai,Hospltal.
son·ln·law, Bernard Stewart.
A daughter of the late Mr. and
A homemaker, Mrs . JohnSQn Mrs. Charles Adams, Mrs. Hud·
was a member of the Hope son was born Feb. 21, 1908 at
Baptist Chapel, Middleport.
Antiquity. She attended the RuSurviving are two daughters tland Bible Methodist Church.
Surviving are four daughters,
and a son-ln·Iaw, Olga Stewart,
East Liverpool, and Donna and Mrs. Guy (Marie) Bush, PomeFrank Gheen of Middleport; four roy; Mrs. Sherman (Margaret)
sons and daughters·ln-law, Jim Williams, Middleport; Mrs. Kenand Betty Johnson, Middleport, neth (Donna) Eblin, . Rutland,
formerly of Mason; Bill and and Mrs. Laura Autherson,
Delores Johnson, Carroll; Milton Tuppers PlaJns; live sons,
and Verna Johnson, Grayson, George, Rutland; Denver, NorKy., and Bob and Doris Johnson, ton; Lewis, .Racine, and Bernard
Columbus; a brother and sister- and Sonny, both of Middleport; a
in-law, Emmett and Bird Roush, sister, Mrs. NeiUe Rice. East
Marmett, W.Va., 25 grandchild· Liverpool; 19 grandchildren. 29
great·grandchlldren, and one
ren and 35 great-grandchildren.
Services will be held at I p.m. great -great·gr anddaughter,
Besides ber parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband, Dewey W, Hudson In 1985.
The Daily Sentinel
and three sons, Dewey. Jr., John
Robert and Charles H. Hudson.
(USPS 1411-. . )
Services wlll be held at I p.m.
A Dtvll._ of Mllllmfdla, Inc. ·
Wednesday at the Foglesong
Published f'vt'r'Y aftprnoon. Monday
Funeral Home In Mason, W.Va.,
throu~h Frklay. 111 Court S1. , Po·
with the Rev. Amos Tillis officiatmf.'roy, Ohio. by Ihi&gt; Ohio Valley PubIng. Burial wUl be In Graham
lishing Company /Multimedia. Inc.,
Porn•· ly. Ohio 4!7~. Ph. 992·21!56. S..
Cemetery. Friends may call at
cond :ass posra•e paid at PomE'f'OY. ~ the funeral home from 2to 4and 7
Ohlr
to 9 p.m. today .

Reagan for czar fallacy _____B_en._W_at_ten_b_er_g
There Is talk around the White
House that President Reagan
ought to appoint a "czar." The
cza r, or czarina, would organize
I he effort to win public and
congressional support for con·
tinued military aid to the Nicara·
gua n con tras . So far , bureau·
cratic in-fighting has stymied the
appoin tment.
It may not even be a very good
Idea. It Is certainly late: The vote
on contra aid is schedu led for
September. There is only one
person who ca n be the czar of this
policy: Ronald Reagan.
There is renewed talk in
Washington that the old fellow Is
losing his stuff, that he's not quile
with II. Some of his most loyal
supporters describe him as a
"part ·tlme president ." He Is
seen as a lame duck. What ca n he
do•
Reagan believes that the Nicaraguan situation may be the most
important internatio nal issue
facing AmNica today. He is
right. It wiii likely set the course
of American foreign policy. We
are eit her going to be an
assertive power, an American

eagle, that defends our interests
and values, or we are goi ng to be
an America lame duck, wad ling
Indecisively from crisis to crisis,
hams trung by a Congress with an
isolationist tropism.
The national stakes are high
enough, but for Reagan person·
ally they are even higher . .Re·
member, the Marxis t-Leninist
Sandlnista government in Nicaragua grew and flourished on
Reagan's watch. Clare Booth
Luce has said that pr.esldencles
are usually summed up by a
single sentence. If Reagan
doesn't prevail, his one-liner
may be, "He was the President
who lost Central America to
commun ism."
A president Is also judged by
whether he has preserved pres!·
dentiai power in the never·
ending battle with Congress.
Complex constitutional questions have legitimately been
raised in the Iran·contra hear·
logs. But one big part of the
agenda is the fight over a simple
question: Who's In charge? If
Congress, using scandal·hype
and media carnage as levers,

succeeds In derailing contra aid,
the answer wiii be there for all to
see. The 535
members o!
Congress. will be even more in
charge than they are now. and
Reagan's legacy will be one more
step toward 535 secretaries of
state serving sim ultaneously.
There is · also the matter of
discipline within the Reagan
administration, right up to the
White House staff. There, too, the
question Is " Who's in charge?"
Staunch Reaganauts suddenly
feel betrayed by White House
staffers who are leaking a
strategy to undercut Secreta ry of
State George Shullz's - and
Reagan's - support of Assistant
Secretary of State Elliott
Abrams, now under fire from the
Iran/ contra fallout. The White
House white-flag idea Is to
pre·emptively surrender, righ t
now. to members of Congress
who are demanQ)ng Abrams'
resignation. That White House
mushiness, say the Reagan loyal·
ists, Is a disastrous cave·in:
throwing a baby off the sled to
feed the howling congressional
wolves will only whet the appe·

INDIANAPOLIS (NEA l -For
the time since the Memor ial Day
au to race was Inaugurated in
1911 , the grueling Indianapolis
500 will not be the major sporting
event here this year.
That development is note·
worthy because for decades
Indianapolis has had a well·
deserved reputation as a Mldw·
est backwater where nothing of
note ever occurred except for the
au to race. Even the natives
referred disparagingly to their
home town as "India-no·place."
But the Pan American Games,
to be held here Aug. 7 to 23, not
only will overshadow the MemorIal Day 500 but also will mark
Indianapolis· success In achlev·
lng the urban renaissance that
has eluded may other cities.
The largest sports event held
anywhere in the world this year,
the Pan American games will
attract 6,500 athletes, coaches
and officials from 38 nations In
the Western Hemisphere. Being
designated as host is a coup for
Indianapolis, which has repeat·
edly turned to sports to define

Itself.
The Market Square Arena, a
17,000-seat facility completed In
1974 at a cost of $16.4 million, is
the home of the Indiana Pacers of
the National Basketball
Association.
The Hoosier Dome, a 60,500seat covered stadium completed
In 1984 at a cost of$77.5 million, Is
the home of the Indianapolis
Coils of the National Football
League .
The metropolitan area's more
than $136 million worth of world·
dass sports facilities also In·
eludes a natatorium for swim·
mlng and a velodrome for
cycling. In addition, Indianapolis
is the headquarters of a halfdozen amateur sports federations, Including those governing
gymnastics, diving and rowing,
Indianapolis' success In capturing two professional sports
franchises when many other
communities would gladly settle
for one masks the fact that
Indiana's capital Is hardly a "big
city." Its population barely ex·
ceeds 700,000, and Its nascent

skyline poses no threat to New
York or Chicago.
For the past two decades,
however. Indianapolis had made
up in spirit what It lacked In size.
The city's astounding growth
began In the mld·1960s under a
Democratic mayor , John
Barton.
The commitment to aggress ive
but judicious development was
enhanced In the 1970s and 1980s
under two Republican mayorsRichard Lugar, now a U.S.
senator, and William Hudnut,
now serving his third term.
Municipal olticials estimate
that more than $2 billion has been .
invested since the early 1970s to
construct dozens othotels, office
buildings and retail complexesbut the city's revitalization extends beyond sports facilities and
commercial buildings.
Union Station, a railroad depot
built In the late 18l0s, has been
transformed Into a superb "festive marketplace, " a Romanesque showplace of more than
100 shops and restaurants. A
hotel Incorporated Into the com-

lite for more babies.
So Ronald Reagan should take
to the airwaves. He should go
down to the White House Situa·
lion Room, take off his jacket, .
roll up his sleeves and say . .
roughly, this: "You betcha we ·
need a czar to get contra aid. I've
appointed· one. Me. I'll be right
here most mornings. I'll talk to
the press and to the public. I'm
calling the shots at the White
House. I'll explain that the
contras are making real military
headway. I'll tell the public that
if we lose down there, the Soviets
will have a beachhead on the
North American mainland. I'll
be telling members of Congress
who vote wrong that I'm playing
hardball on this one; If the
contras die because the money
was shut down, I'm going to
publicly blame them in the 1988
elections."
Reagan Is only about 20 votes
short of carrying Congress for
contra aid. He can win it with a
fuli·court press. Then no one will
say he Is losing his grip. And his
one sentence may read, " He
threw the communists out of
Central America."

~

plex includes suites fashioned
from refurbished Pullman cars.
Other old but st urdy downtown
office buifdings have been care·
fully res tored . St. Elmo's Rest au·
rant, for example, still serves
superb steaks in the same
buildiing where it was founded in
1902 .
The Indianapolis Children's
Museum Is the world '~ largest
museum for youngsters. The
city's oflerings for adults Include
the Indiana Repertory Theater.
Indianapolis Symphony Orches·
tra and Indianapolis Museum of
Art.
•
Now under construction at the
edge of t1le downtown area is
Wblte River State Park, a $200
million, 250-acre project that will
Include a greenhouse, zoo, art
museum and amusement park.
The resurgence here has produced a booming economy. Local
officials claim net gains of
almost 6,100 businesses and
~.400
jobs during the past
decade- not bad for a city whose
most notable endeavor used to be
an auto race.

1

A marriage license has been Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to William Edward Arnold, 43, and Agnes Gall Ohlinger,
48, both of Pomeroy , .

Contra connection ___J_a_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n_a_n_d_D_ta_le_~_a_n_A_tt_a
WASHINGTON- The Senate·
House hearings into the Iran·
contra scandal begin their se.·
cond phase tomorrow. and we'd
like to suggest some lines of
inquiry the panel should pursue.
Severa l questions remain unanswered following our own investigation, which turned up evidence
of (he secret arms sales to Iran as
early as December 1985.
The crucial focus of the com·
mittee' s second round of hear·
logs will be President Reagan' s
role In the clandesti ne enterprise
-particularly his knowledge (or
ignorance ) -of the diversion of
money to the Nicaraguan co ntras
when official U.S. aid had been
forbidden by Congress. The joint
committee hopes to get these key
answers from Adm. John Pain·
dexter, the former national se·
curlty advisor, and Lt. Col.
Oliver North, the embattled
Marine who appears to have been
the heart and soul of the entire
operation.
But there's another line of
inq uiry we fin d equally fasclnat ·
ing, and more important for the
co untry in the long run. This Is
the rol e, if any, of Vice President
George Bush. After al l. In the
unlikely event of a Reagan
impeachment or resignation,
Bush would become president.
And he is the front·runner.
meanwhile, for the Republican
presidential nomination. Any sig·

Pome10y-Middleport, Ohio

Local Briefs: ·

J.

Indianapolis in the fast lane __R_o_ber_t_wa_Lte_rs

'

. '..

M(lmoer: UnltNI Pre-u tnternatlonal.

In land Dally Press A.IIOCiaflon and lht
Ohio NewspaJM'r Aasoclatton. National
Advf:'rtl.slnR RPprf"S('nfatlvf:'. Branham
Nf'W1!plptaf SaiH, 711 Third AYl"ttur,
NrM' York. New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: S.nd addrels &lt;hanR"'
IO Th• Dally s.oillntl, Ill Court Sl.,

Pomeroy, 01110 45'11!1.

8UII8CRJP'I'ION UTII8
BJ Carrier wllol•-

OnP Wft&gt;k ........ .. .......... ....... . ' ' '" ... $1.2S

OnP Month .................... ............. $5. 4~ ,
OnE' Year ., ........... ............ ........ 165.00
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I'JIICE
Dall;v .... .............. .. .... .... .... ... 2!1 Cents
Sub~rlbf'rs not dE"Sirlntf to pay lhecar·

rll'r may remit In advanC'E' dlrf'd to
ThP Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
blsl!!l. Credit will be gtwn carrtf'l' fiCh

W£'8:.

No subl&lt;rlpll- by matlt."'""lllf'dln
al'f'as whfff home carrift tf'I'Vft ts
avallabl£'.

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Southern . ..
(Continued tram page 1)
were approved as tuition stu·
dents for the 1987-118 year. Vlem·
bershlp for the high school and
junior high in tbe Athletic Associ·
atton was approved, along with
by·law change~ 01 the COGSEOVC, the consoritum medical
Insurance-, cooperative purchasIng and computer service for the
treasurer's office.
The board also approved mem·
bersblp Ill SEOKWA at a COlt ot
100. The memberlllip allows the
school pei'IOIIIIel to participate In
semlnan on current top1e1 held
lnAtb!aa .
Attend lag were J oaepb
'nlllren, CbarUe Pylel, Denny
Evan~, Sc:olt Wolfe, Don Smith,
aDd SuperlllleDdentllobby Ord,
aDd Treuurer Dennie HilL

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Elderly appeal for special inflation rate:·
By TAMARA HENRY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
special Inflation rate Index for
the elderly would boost retirement Income enough to ease the
strain of daily life, say aged
Americans Uke Florence Thomp·
SQD, who eats "a lot of corn
flakes" to stretch her meager
budget.
Thompson, 72, of Fairview,
Mich., joined other senior ~Ill·
zells In testifying Monday before
the Senate Special Committee on
Aging, which Is considering the
development of a new Consumer
Price Index for the elderly.
Committee Chairman John
Melcher, D·Mont., contends the
current Inflation rate il'dicator
falls to reflect the special infla·
lion faced by elderly Americans.
"We eat a lot of cornflakes,
chicken, the cheapest we can
get," Thompson told the commit·
tee, noting her $389 Medicare and

Supplemenlal Security Income Consumer Price Index for the
check was reduced to $208.10 In elder ly. all aching it to a supple·
April when she married her mental appropriations bili for the
80-year-oid neighbor.
current fiscal year. which ends
With a combined monihly Sept. 30.
income of $609.10, Tho1ftpson said
A committee aide said Man·
about $160 goes for prescription day, however. that Melcher's
drugs, $193 goes for rent, $20pays panel had learned a Senatefor a telephone, $131.621s used for House conference committeeiry ·
a car payment and $15.551s paid ing to compromise different
for life Insurance. Groceries and versions of the bill dropped the
church quickly use up the rest, proposal quietly Friday, mainly
she said:
.because the Bureau of Labor
Rose Affayroux, 71, of Balli· Statistics said tt could . not de·
more, said she and her husband velop a new CPI in 90 days as
usually bypass breakfast, spend required.
75 cents for a hot lunch at a senior
Cos t·of·livlng adjustments for
citizen center and eat soup for Social Security and other retire·
dinner.
ment programs are tied · to
changes in the CPl. The COLA
"I'm one of the lucky few." she Increase was 1.3 percent in
said. "I'm healthy. I have no January.
expenses for medicine. Neither I
" Retirees spend more on food,
nor my husband."
medical care, and fuel than the
The Senate voted 95·0 last general population." Melcher
month for a proposal to develop a

said Monday . "While the prices
of food and fuel tend to fluctuaie:
dramatically, medll'al costs:
have been rtsinR persistently in ·
recent years. Prescription drugs :
alone rose 9 percent from 1985 to:
1986."
The Railway Labor Executives ;
Association, AFL-CTO, National'
Committee to Preserve Social :
Security and Medicare, and the ;
National Association of Retired I
Federal Employees all sup·:
ported a new CPI for the elderly.:
But Judith Brown of the ·
American Association of Retired:
Persons, which represents 26 :
million elderly Americans, 1
agreed with the government that :
research is ·Inconclusive about '
the need for a separate CPl.
'
Brown suggested the Bureau of :
Labor Statistics revise the way II i
calculates medical ca~e In deter· i
mining the general CPl.
!
/

J

Pit bulls becoming drug dealers' weapo~
By FRANK COOK
United Press International
In cities co'ast to coast police
report that vicious pit bulls are
becoming the weapon of choice
among drug dealers because the
dogs are legal to own, more
terrorizing than guns and better
at delaying pollee.·
From New York to Ca lifornia.
officers say pit bulls are being
used to guard so·called "rock
houses" where drugs ar.e manufactured and stashed.
In Oakland, Call!., pollee of·
fleer Christine Haddad said pit
bulls were becoming prevalent in
the high · crime ghetto
neighborhoods.
"I would estimate that every
third or fourth house, there's a pit
bu II,'' she said. "The pit bull is
becoming more and more asso·
elated with drug dealers all the
time. They're better than guns
because you don' t get arrested
for having a pit bull."
In New York, drug dealers also
are using pit bulls to guard crack
houses, according to Madeline
Bernstein, a spokeswoman for
the American Society for the
Prevention of Cr uelty to
Animals.
"II pollee have to stop when
four pit bulls are there on a raid.

that's when the toilet starts the victim's spine.
the dog's ·earlier attack on ~
flushin g,'' she said. "Drug dealIn defense of the breed, Karin child. The dog had to be beate'ti
ers are also using them for Maida of Manassas. Va., who off the woman officer by 4
protection because they hold up · helped train president Reagan' s tP!cvlsion crew that was cover·
eac h other constantly ."
dog, Lucky , said that In her ing the story,
Los Angeles pollee detective experience American pit bull
Part of the problem In dealing
Bill Leader said pit bulls have the terriers ha ve · not been aggres·
wit h pit bulls Is the difficulty In
added attraction of giving early sive toward people.
warning of approac h of
Although pit bull terriers were drafting an effective law against.
strangers.
"bred to !)ite and not let go, apd them.
" If you' re a dealer sitting they give no warning," their
inside your hou se with your Uzls behavior depends more on thei r
and automatic weapons, you masters, she said.
won' t know the pollee are there
Over the past several weeks
until they knock on the door, " he there have been many reports of
(As of t0:30 a.m.)
said. "A pit bull will give you pit bulls attacki ng, maiming and
Provided by
killing people, mostly children.
. warning.
Bryce and Mark Smith '· ·
Specially bred pit bulls can be In many cases ow ners have said
of Blunt Ellis .r. LOewl
·•,
the most dangerous dog in the the attacks were accidental. but
ca nine world. Their jaws can In a growing number of instances · Fl rm
Price- ·
exer t twice the power of either the dogs have been sicked on Am Electric Power .. ..... ...... 27W•
Ge rman shepherds or Doberman vic tims with only the sligh test AT&amp;T ..... ... .. .......... .... ....... , 28\-l
pinschers. Unlike most dogs, provocation.
Ashland Oil ,., .. ..... ...... ,, , 63~ ·
when a pit bull has a victim in its
Police in major cit les report Bob Eva ns Farms ,,, ........... 25··
jaws It will violently shake Its that ghetto youths often keep pit Charming Shoppes ..............31',1
head, causing rips and tears, bulls as status symbols. In a Federal Mogul .................... 44~ ·
rather than just hold its prey In recent Washington case, a 16· Goodyear T&amp; R ................ , .681)1"
Its grip.
year·old boy sicked his dog onto Heck's Inc ..... ...................... 4%
an Il ·year-oid just be~ause the Limited Inc. ,,, ., ,.. ,,,.,, .. .,44' •
Pit bulls also can be bred to younger boy had discovered the Multimedia inc ....... .. . ,, ... , ....59 •:
fight to kill, rather than quit dog's hiding place.
Rax Restaurants .......... .. ...... 51)(,·
when Its opponent has surren·
In a recent Los Angeles case, Robbins &amp; Myers ......... ...... .10'1f ·
dered. In one publicized case, a an animal control officer was Shoney's Inc. .... ... .. ...... , ..... 30\-l"•
child under attack tried to play atta&lt;:ked by a pit bull as she Wendy 's Jnt I. .... ....... , , .. .'.. , , 91)1
dead, but the dog continued arrived at a house to Investigate Worthington Ind., .. ,, ........ ,, , .. 22"i
attacking, twice biting through
'

Daily stock prices :

'

Senate bill restricts vicious dogs
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehou~~e Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
With rural lawmakers battling it
to the end, the Ohio Senate early
today adopted a House-passed
bill restricting dangerous and
vicious dogs, and singling out the
pit bull terrier for automatic
sanctions.
The 26-7 vote at 12:45 a.m.
cllmax'ed a debate which began
before the dinner hour on Moo·
day and was interrupted by a 3 ~
hour recess and discussion of a
budget language bill.
Rep. Robert E. Hickey, D·
Dayton, the author of t.he leg isla·
tlon, said hewUI ask the House to
concur In the Senate version
today.
Legislative action follows a
series of incidents in Ohio cities
Involving attacks by vicious
dogs, mainly pit bulls, which
have resulted In serious maul·
lngs and deaths.
The bill defines a dangerous
dog as one which threatens or
scares people and a vicious dog
as one that has ca used Injury to a
perSQn or killed another dog. It

requires dangerous dogs to be
kept on a leash and vicious dogs
to be locked up on the owner's
property and controlled with a
chain leash or muzzled while off
the property.
'Violators would be subject to a
penalty of 30 days in jail and a
maximum fine of $250 in the case
of dangerous dogs, and six
months in jail and a maximum
fine of $1,000 If a vicious dog
injures someone. A repeat offense by the owner of a vicious
dog would be a felony.
The owner of a vicious dog
would have tocarry$50,000worth
of liability insurance. Local
governments would be able to
adopt further restrictions, in·
eluding putting the dog to death
for an attack.
Sen. Neal F. Zimmers Jr.,
D·Dayton, the bill's lloor man·
ager, said pit bulls have become
"a macho animal and a new
modern weapon for people to
parade up and down in the
shopping mail."
Zimmers said neighbors are
afraid to let children play in their

own yards and one man In his
dis trict carries a loaded revolver
while mowing his grass In case
the neighboring pit bu II jumps his
fence.
Sen . Michael White, D·
Cleveland, sa id one o! his cam·
palgn workers was killed by his
own pit bull, his fa ce "eaten oft."
"No animal has caused such
carnage and mayhem," said
White, adding that the dogs have
"an innate instlncl to kill." He
said pit bulls represent 2 percent
of the dog population and cause
60 percent of the Injuries .
The Senate voted for an amendment making the pit bull, by
definition, a vicious dog. This
was done over the objection of
Sen. M. Ben Gaeth. R·Deliance,

.

'

'

,n 1

who said hundreds of pit bull• •
have responsible owners.
"Don't. do this!" Gaeth pleadl!d,
to his colleagues .
•, •
Sen. Paul E. Pfeifer, R·.
Bucyrus, was voted down whe)l
he tried to eliminate the sect1011,
·on dangerous dogs, saying many .,
farm dogs are trained to scare off
prowlers ond would be classlflech
as dangerous under the bill. , J
, . - - - - - - - - - - -;

Hospital news
Veteran's Memorial
Monday admiss ions: Arthur
Barr, Middleport; Christ ine
Shaeffer, Pomeroy; Nell Mid·
dleswart , Portland,
Monday discharges:· Evelyn
Knight, Melody Roberts.

Justice department denies approval
By NEIL ROLAND
WASHINGTON !UP!) - The
Justice Department denies At·
torney General Edwin Meese or
any of its other officials gave
legal approval to Lt. Col. Oliver
North's efforts to arm the Nicaraguan Contra rebels when such
U.S. aid was Illegal.
'l'he denial responded to published reports of recent testim·
ony by an unidentified former
National Security Council aide
before the grand jury convened
In the Iran·Contra case by
Independent prosecutor Law·
renee Walsh.
Referring to the matter Monday. Justice Department spokes·
man Terry Eastland character·
lzed as "erroneous" an d
" absurd" any report that Meese
or other department officials
approved the pro- Contra activities of North, the Marine !Ired
from the NSC staff lor his central
role In the scandal.
"The attorney general can' 1
recall any such review," East·
land said, "and we never conducted any review."
A source familiar with the
testimony of the unidentified
former NSC aide gave this
account to United Press
InternatiOnal:
'Jbe wltneu testified that In
June 1!111&amp;, be approached the
White House lawyer lor natiOnal

security adviser John Poindex·
ter to tell him North apparenlly
was t rylng to tunnel arms to the
Contras despite the ban on U.S.
military aid to the rebels from
Octoi)er 1984 through October
1986. The witness said he bluntly
questioned the legality of North's
activities.

mld·l985.

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POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

The White House lawyer,
Cmdr. Paul Thompson. then met
with Poindexter for about 20
minutes and returned to say,
"Everything North has done has
been checked with the Justice
Department," the witness told
Walsh's grand jury.
A source said Walsh's office
requested the testimony from
North's fellow NSC aide "to try to
build a case that Poindexter
knew everything North was
doing."
The administrallon has In·
sisted North acled on his own In
funneling arms to the Contras.
thOugh President Reagan has
acknowledged hiS endorsement
of the private aid network that
was set up to deliver such
weapons.
Tlie only legal review of
North's activities that has previOusly come to light was conducted by the White House
Intelligence Oversight Board In

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Page---4- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 30, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·.

slow starter, but this Isn't (he
type of tournament where you
want to start out slowly, and I
have In my last two matches,"
Evert said. "I' m not where I'd
like to be yet."
In another exciting five -setter,
Austra li an Peter Doohan,
Becker's co nqueror, overcame
American qualifier Lelf Shlras,
6-7 (6 - 8~. 4-6. 6-3, 6- 4, 12-10, In 4
hours and 24 minutes .
Doohan next meets S!obodan
Zlvojlnovlc. The powerful Yugoslav delivered 26 aces Monday In
wiping out Jeremy Bates In
straight sets.
Two other seeded players were
eliminated along with Mayotte.
bringing the total for three
rounds to eight men and six
women. Filth seed Mlloslav
Meclr fell to Anders Jarryd; a
semifinalist here In 1985, 6-3, 6- 3,
6-3," and No.9 Bettina Bunge lost
to Ros Fairbank, 7-6 (8-6), 6-4.
Third seed Mats Wflander,
cla iming he's playing a far more
aggressive game than ever before on grass, crushed fellow
Swede Jonas B. Svensson, 7-6
17-0), 6-1,6- 3, and has yet to drop
a set. He next meets 14th seed
Emlllo Sa nchez, a 7-5, 6-4, 7-6
17-4~ victor over Christo Van
Rensburg.
Australian Pat Cash, the No. 11
seed and a semifinalist here in
1984, also continued to Impress
with a 7-6 (7-4), 6-2, 2- 6, 6-4
victory over Michie! Schapers.
Cash next meets Forget.
Third-round winners · among
the women Included fifth seed
Pam Shriver, No. 8 Claudia
Kohde-Kilsch and No. 11 CatarIna Llndqvlst. Shriver crushed
Beth Herr, 6-2, 6-2, and has
yielded only 11 games In three
matches; Kohde- KII sch beat Elizabet h Smylie, 6-2, 6-1; and
Lindqvlst defeated American
Elise Burgin, 6-4, 6-1.

.Eliminating college football bowl
. games would mean losing money
DALLAS tUPIJ -The executive director of the Cotton Bowl
' says a proposa l by Califor niaBerkeley Chancellor Michael
Heyman to eliminate bowl
games was simply a reaction to
·current athletic problems and
would cut of! one of the major
.· revenue sourees for college
. soorts.
Hey man sugges ted bowl
games and postseason basket .. ball tournaments could be abo!·
!shed In an attempt to bring
college athletics Into proper
. proportion with the res t o!
academic life.
"Chancellor Hey man's sugges. tlon to ettmlnatc the bowl games
. · - wlthotherevents-represents
an overall reaction to whatever
oroblems exist' In Intercollegiate

..

athletics," Cotton Bowl execu tive director Jim Brock, the
Immediate past chairman of the
NCAA bow ls committee. said
Monday .
" In a meeting desig ned to
examine cost-control and putting
college sports In a solid fin ancia l
footing, it seems strange there
would be disc uss ions of doing
away with an Instit ution - the

bowl games - that has served
the colleges and universities
well.
"The bowls have contributed to
the Institutions more than a
quarter of a billion dollars In the
las t 10 years, more than $127
mlllon In the las t three years
alone. Much of this has gone to
s upp or t non-reve nu e a nd
women's sports.''

Sports Digest
Football
The Coas t Guard In Galveston ,
Texas. has ended .the search for
the body of a Harvard football
player who was hit by a motorboat and Is pr·es umed drowned.
.James Vanderpool, a kicker on
last year's Harvard fr eshman
foo tball team and a mel'l)ber of

the track team. has been missi ng
In Ga lveston Ba y since Sa turday .
... Visitation was to be held
Monday night for Carl Lldberg, a
University of Minnesota football
sta r In the early 1920s. Lldberg.
86, of Minneapolis. died of
pneumonia Friday at the Ambassador Health Care Center In New
Hope.

Earnha~l

assured

of $1 million season
!UPI ) -Dale Earnhardt has
Increased his lead In the NASCAR Winston Cup stock car
ser ies. ass uring himself a second
consecutive $1-mllllon season.
Earnhard t moved 304 points
ahead of Bill Etllott by winning
the Miller American 400 at
Michigan Inter national Speedway Sunday.

-. rh
WAY TO GO OLD TIMER - Hank Aaron Is greeted by
teammates Leu brock an d Dick Allen alter Aaron's home run at
the Old 'nmer'• Baseball C18ll!llc at RFK stadium Looking on Is
American League catcher Blll Freehan. (UPI)

:Largest twin trifecta payoff'
. :recorded at Scioto Downs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Two winning tickets were sold on
the la rges t tw in trlfecta jackpot
o! the season Monday night at
Scioto Downs. Each ticket was
worth $46,572.
The names o! tlcketholders
were not released.
The object of the twin trllecta
.Is to' pick the win, place and show
hOrses In the two races- fourth
and sixth - for a $1 bet .
The winners cor rectly picked
the 2·3-8 combination In the

fourth race and the4-:&gt;-l combo In
the sixth race to claim the big
payoffs.
Meadow Lyle won the fourth
race. !allowed by Red Star Crown
and Glory Monger. In the sixth, It
was Easy Aut hor it y !lnlshlng
ahead of Falcon Bird and Leonard T Yorktown.
The fourth race trlfecta paid
$34.70 and the sixth race trlfecta
paid $691.
Monday night 's crowd of 3,261
wagered $321,386.

By MIKE SULLIVAN
UPI Sports Wrtler
The New york Mets, a team
full of sell confidence last season,
fear the "danger zone."
Ozzle Smith singled home
VInce Coleman In the lith Inning
Monday night, helping the National League East- leading St.
Louis Cardinals open a threegame series with a comeback 8-7
victory over the Mets at Shea
Stadium.
"We're ·very close to the
danger zone." New York's Howard Jollnson said, as the Mets !ell
71-2 games behind theCarotnals.
"We have to take the next two
games. If we split or get swept It
will be a very difficult situation."
Coleman opened the llt h by
drawing a four-pitch walk from
Jesse Orosco, 1-6, and mov .&gt;d to
IN A CLOUD OF DUST - Philadelphia's Von
Hayes Is tagged out at home plate by Pittsburgh

•

•
:
'
•

• AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - Four
ilrls have made local sports
hiStory by sweeping first place In
all categories of the Akron Area
Soapbox Derby.
· The girls abutout their male
rompetltton Sunday for the llrst
lime ID the history or the local
event.
• MellsBa Knox, 12, Wadsworth,
and Heather Seabeck, 10, Suf·

·!

·•
:
:
•
~

:

field, took top honors In the
suburban senior and junior olvtstons, respectively. Jodi Pratt,
11, and Melissa Held, 10, both of
Akron, won first places In the
metro senior and Junior dlv ls Ions, respectively.
The girls will represent Akron
Aug. 15 when It l!osts the :lOth
All-American Soapbox Derby.

pitcher Brian Fisher durtlig the fourth Inning
Monday night. (UPI)

Yankees out slug Blue Jays
RETURNS - Number ten seed Tim Mayoltee
of the United Stales makes a return against

By DAVID AVITABILE
UPI Sports Writer
The lnteslty level accompanyIng Monday's meeting between
the New York Yankees and the
Toronto Blue Jays reached
heights usually saved until
September.

Mikael Penfors of Sweden at Wlmbeldon . (UPJ)

Azinger enjoys Hartford win
By FREDERICK WATERMA N
UPI Sports Writer
CROMWELL, Conn. iUPI I Paul Azlnger entered the
Grea ter Hartford Open determined to relax and enjoy hlmsel!.
Now, after a case of nerves, he is
also enjoying the $126,000
win ner's check.
By co ntrolling the putter that
"quivered" in his hands Su nday.
he rolled in an 8-foot putt on the
lHth hole to preserve a one-shot
triumph, his third tournament
victory of the year, and returned
to the No. 1 spot on t he money list
wi th $576.%2.
Azlnger's final rou nd of 1·
over-par 72 was the highest
closing round by an event winner
this year. However, his 15-under
to tal of 269 eq ualled the tour nament record held by Peter
Jacobsen and Mac O'Grady .
Azlnger says the strain
brought on by his success this
yea r started to bother him In the
spring.
"I wasn' t enj oying myself
after I won because I put too
much pressure on myself, " he
said.
Azlnger, wi nless on the PGA
Tour until this year, took three
weeks off before the U.S. Open
and missed the cut there "be·
cause I was a bl I rusty. ThIs week

I decided I'd try not to live up to
my expectations and just relax.··
The Grmter Hartford Open
was Az inger's 16th tournament of
the year. Alew pros have already
played as many as 22.
"I 've lea rned a lot about
myself," Azinger said. "Some
guys can play six or seven weeks
straight. I've foun d that the right
form ula for me is to play three or
four weeks and then ta ke a week
off.' ·
During his pre-Open layoff. he
"didn't touch a club for 15 days"
and thought about ·his mental
approach to life and the business
o! golf.
"I changed my focus in life
because my priorities were out a!
line." He said his fa mily and
religion are agai n his main
concerns because " money is just
temporary happiness."
Azi nger's money total for the
year Is the third-highes t ever
accumulated In one season on the
Tour. The only pros to have
earned more are Greg Norman,
wit h $653,296, and Bob Tway,
with $6.'i2;780, both during the
1986 season.
Azlnger, who said he "woke up
nervous" on Sunday, used his
r lut ch putt to leave Dan Forsman

and Wayne Levi tied for second,
both players watching near the
18th green to see If I hey would be
taking part In a playoff . Instead,
each won $61,600.
On No. 17, a narrow par-4,
Azinger hit a driver off the tee
and the shot faded Into the wat er
hazard bordering the right side of
the fairw ay. ·He managed a
bogey to ca rry a one-shot lead
Into the 18th.
Levi wondered abo ut Azlnger's
strategy lor the hole, saying "I
was surprised he went anywhere
near the water."
Forsman, one of only two
golfers to shoot In the 60s a ll four
days at the Tournament Players
Cl ub of Connecticut, said that
when Azlnger's attempted lag
putt for 25 feet slid so far past the
18th hole, "I was thinking, 'The
door's open again.'
" I don't care how good you are,
the greens had been trampled
and there were spike marks. I
though! the door was open, but he
shut It when he slammed the next
putt In," said Forsman .
That putt actually hit the left
lip of the cup and curled In, alter
Azlnger examined, !rom every
angle, the eight feet between the
ball and the cup .

~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w

Orr ~onsoles Knight
rUPI ) -I ndiana basket ball
coach Bobby Knight, sought for
extradition to Puerto Rico for
slugging a pollee officer during
the 1979 Pan Am Games, was
counseled by Iowa State basket ball coach Jo hnny Orr at the
Amana VIP . golf tournament In
Iowa City. Iowa . "You've got to
be careful, Bobby, because
there's some Puerto Ricans out
ther e," Orr said. "They're In the
roughs; sostay outoftherough."

percentage of 1.304 and an
on-base percentage o! .615.
He set a rook ie record with five
home ru ns over two games
against the Cleveland India ns on
Satu rday and Sunday. He . also
lied a modern major- league
record for most runs scored over
two co nsecutive nine-Inni ng
games - nlne.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES
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" It was scar y, n the Yankees

Dave Winfield said after his
eighth-Inning grand slam lilted
the Yankees to a 15-14 victory
over the Blue Jays In the first of a
three-game series between the
American League East front runners. "Everyone was scorIng; everyone was hitting. You
couldn't play the whole season
with that kind o! Intensity someone would be dead."
The two teams combined lor
eight home runs In Exhibition
Stadium, as Winfield drove In six
runs with a pair a! homers, and
Don Mattingly added a grand
slam to power the Yankees, who

- ...-..- ...·- - ---

...

_-

The Daly

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Spotts Writer
CLEVELAND (UPI) - California tl)anager Gene Mauch
refuses to allow rain delays to
Influence hi s personnel
decisions.
"When you have a nine-man
pitching staff, you have to be
resourceful," he said. " Make
that judicious and resourceful. "
Angels first baseman Wally
Joyner agreed, adding his team
"will be tougher when guys !Ike
tpltchers) John Candelaria , Kirk
• McCaskill and Donnie Moore
" come off the disabled list. I think
:: everybody In this room realizes
:~ that when they come back we'll

cole slaw, hot roll, butter 1nd cofftt. Sony,
no substitutes tll:apt btwrap will! lddi-

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runs, powering the Red Sox.
White Sox 5, Oakland 2
At Chicago, Harold Baines and
Iva n Calderon hit back-to- back
homers In the third Inning,
helping the White Sox snap a
four-game los ing streak.
Rangers 4, Mariners 3
At Arlington, Texas, Pete
O'Brien singled home Jerry
Browne from second base In the
eighth Inning to give Texas Its
fifth straight triumph.
Royals 3, Twlllll 3, 5 Innings
At Kansas City, Mo., Bo
Jackson belted his 16th home run
of the season to cap a three-run
rally that pushed the Royals past
Minnesota In a game shortened
to five Innings because of rain.
Tigers 11, Brewers I
At Milwaukee, Jack Morris
allowed two hits over seven
Innings and Tom Brookens drove
in three runs to pace Detroit.
Morris, 11-3. struck out seven and
walked six.

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Maine

INTENSE LOOK- Detrtot pitcher Jack Morris gives an Intense
look toward home plate 811 manager Sparky Anderson confers with
him. Morris loaded the bases before striking out Mttwaukee's Roh
Deer and Ernest Rites to get out of the Inning. (UPI)

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Greg Swindell, 3·8, dropped his
fifth s traight decision and took
Cleveland's eighth consecutive
toss. The Indians hao,:e dropped ll
of 14 games and have the
majors's worst record at 25-~9.
"Swindell has a problem when

he tries to throw too hard," said
Cleveland manager Pat Corrales, whose team has been
outscored 39-7 In Its last lour
games. "He reaches back, his
shoulder !lies open and he's all
over the place.
" tAnd ) Joyner's In a good
groove. He adjusts well to
pitchers . He presents a
problem."
The Angels took a 1-0iead In the
first on Schofield's one-out RBI
double.
California added three runs In
the fourth. Brian Downing
slngled, Devon White was hit by-a
pitch and Doug DeCinces drew a
one-out walk to load the bases.
Hendrick then singled to center,
scoring Downing and While.
With two out, Joyner grounded

a single that scored DeCinces
!rom second base but right
!Ieider Cory Snyder threw Hendrlck out at third .
"This Is the best we've played
all year," said Joyner. " It
couldn't )Iappen at a better time
because It looks !Ike Minnesota
(losers of five straight) Is going
through what we did about a
month ago."
Cleveland got two runs back In
the third on Julio Franco's RBJ
doubl e and Joe Carter's run·
scoring single.
California added Mark McLemore's R~l single off Ed Vande
Berg In the sixth.
Schofield and DeCinces hit
consecutive solo homers o!!Mike
Armstrong to begin a six- run
seventh. Alt er pinch-hitter Ruppert Jones and Bob Boone
wal ked, Joyner greeted Mark
Hulsmann with his 18th homer, a
three-run shot, and Downing
added an RBI doubl e.
Cleveland added two runs In
the ninth on an RBJ double by
Brook Jacoby and an RBI single
by Casey Parsons.
In tonight's game, Ca lifornia
of the New York Mets and
will
start Jack Lazorko 12-3, 5.06
Chicago's Andre Dawson are
second and third, respectively, ERAI against Nlekro (5-7, 5.33
among outfielders. Ryne Sand· ERA~ .
berg a! Chicago Is tops among
second baseman and New York's
Gary Carter ls :flrst at ca tcher.
Fan balloting tor the 1987 A11Star Game, which will be played
July 14 at the Oakland Coliseum,
will continue Iri majo r and minor
league ballparks through Sunday , July 5.
American League leaders announced last Thursday are:
Baltimore ca tcher Terry
Kennedy, New York -L!rst baseman Don Mattingly, Detroit
second baseman Lou Whitaker,
Boston third baseman Wade
Boggs, Baltimore shortstop Cal
Rlpken and outfielders Rickey
Henderson and Dave Winfield of
the New York Yankees and
Minnesota's Kirby Puckett.

Clark takes lead in National
League All-Star balloting
NEW YORK (UP I)- St. Louis
Cardinals first baseman Jack
Clark polled more than 250,000
votes last week to take the lead at
his position for the National
League In the latest fan balloting
for the 58th All- Star Game, the
Commissioner' s O!!lce announced Monday.
Clark, with 619,402 votes, leads
Keith Her nandez of the New
York Mets by more than 130,000
votes. A week ago, Clark trailed
Hernandez by nearly 22,000.
St. Louis shortstop Ozzle Smith
remains the overall leader In
votes with 1,215,18.1. Smith has
started four consecutive All-Star
Games.
Philadelphia third baseman
Mike Schmidt Is seccind overall
(1,016,481) , followed closely by
Cincinnati outfielder Eric Davis
(1,015,115) '
Outfielders Darryl Strawberry

l }le

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••Pf'f

tonight. Greg Minton went four
Innings for his fourth save.
"1 probably would've called
the game after that second delay,
but the umpires have to do what
they think Is right, " said Mauch.
"Besides, Schofield could play
short stop In a swamp."
The rain dela ys totalled two
hours and 21 minutes. Play was
halted for one hour and 11
minutes before the start of the
sixth . The second delay began
just one out later.

Thronto ·

""""

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CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE
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be tough to beat."
Make that tougher. Don Sut ton
earned his 315th career victory
and Joyner drove In lour runs
Monday night, leading California
to Its eighth straight triumph, an
11-4 decision over the Cleveland
Indians in a game twice delayed
by rai n.
George Hehdr lck an d Dick
Schofield each added two RBI as
Sutton, 5-8, allowed two runs on
slx hits over live Innings. Th e
vetera n right-hander, 42, moved
past Gaylord Perry Into sole
possession of 12th place on the
all-time victory Jist. Sutton Is one
victory behind Cleveland's Phil
Nlekro who Is scheduled to pitch

•

i nctudll Tox, Title and Rebete
7170,000 Warr1nty

DINING ROOI ONL
Serwd with wlliJIIMCI potatoes, chicktn·aravy,

"When you come to Toronto,
you know It's a hillers' ballpark," Mattingly, who drove in
five runs, said. "You comeolf the
air plane swingi ng."
Winfield smashed his gra nd
slam, his 18t h homer of the
season, off Tom Henke, tl-3, the
ltfth Toronto pitcher, to rally the
Yankees from a 14-11 deficit.
Dave Righetti allowed three
unearned runs In three Innings to
Improve to 5-3.
Elsewhere. Boston crushed
Baltimore 14-3, Chicago beat
Oakland 5-2, Texas nipped Seattle 4-3, Kansas City beat Minnesota 3-2 In five Innings, Detroit
rou ted Milwaukee 11-1 and California blasted Cleveland !H.
Red Sox 1~. Orioles 3
At Boston, AL batting leader
Wade Boggs went 3 for 5, belted a
grand slam and drove in seven

,!

9.25~~~~ S~J !~S s~:.n!~
,.

took over first place by on·e
game.

second with his 50th stolen base. · Carter'sratchable pop fly fell for
Smith singled to right, giving the a single. Strawberry's RBI single
Cardinals thel'r sixth victory In scored B~ckman and an errant
seven games against New York throw by third baseman Terry
this year.
Pendleton allowed another run to
score with Strawberry gotlig to
third on the two-base error.
Todd Worrell, 3-3, the fourth o! Pitcher John Mitchell then
six Cardinal pitchers, went two singled to left for his second
Innings of one-hit relief for the major-league hit and first RBI as
victory. Ken Dayley, who re- the Mets took a 7-3 lead.
lieved Pat Perry with two on and
"What makes me feel good Is
two out In the 11th, loaded the that we played so poorly but
bases before strlkln!i out Gary managed to win," Cardinals
Carter on three pitches lor his Manager'Whltey Herzog said.
first save.
Phllllea !HI, Pirates 11-3
At Philadelphia, Mtke Schmidt
"We need to win th e nex t two and Darren Daulton each
It's that simple," Mets outfielder doubled In two !lrst-lnnlng runs
helping the Phll!les complete a
Darryl Strawberry said.
sweep.
Cubs 8, Expos 5
New York snapped a 3-3 tie
At
Montreal,
Paul Noce and
with a four-run filth, ca pitalizing
Dave
Martinez
highlighted
Chi·
on sloppy St. Louis defense. A
cago's
20-hlt
attack
with
four
hits
rare error by shortstop Smith on
apiece,
backing
Les
Lancaster's
Wally Backman's ground ball
started the Inning and Gary first major-league victory.
Braves I, Glantll 0
At San Francisco, Zane Smith
!Ired a live-hit shutout to lead ·
Atlanta.
Padres S, Dodgers 0
At Los Angeles, rookie Jimmy
Jones threw eight Innings of
two-hit relief and Carmela Martinez and John Kruk had RBI
singles sparking San Diego.

Angel hitters thump -Indian pitching for 11-4 win

,.

Girls make history at soap box derby
•

~

Cardinals edge the Mets, 8-7

McGwire is A.L. Player of the Week
NEW YORK !UP !)- Oakland
At hletics rookie first baseman
Mark McGwlre. who batted .565
with live home ru ns last week,
Monday was named the American League Player of the Week.
Over six games, McGwlrl'
went 13 for 23 with a pair of
doubles, scored II runs and drove
In eight. He also had a slugging

~

Ohio

Connors wins at Wimbledon
By MORLEY MYERS
who, succumbing to a sudden
UPJ Sports Writer
heat wave, blew a two- set lead In
WIMBLEDON, England falling 2-6, H, 6-4, 6- 3, 7-5.
(UPI) - Jimmy Connors, who
Mayotte, falling for the first
· Monday advanced to the fourt h time In seven Wimbledon appearround of Wimbledon, can relax In ances to reach the round of 16,
knowing he's already won the twice was up a break In the fifth
famed tournament. Ivan Lendl set. But on three occasions he
still lives with the pressure of double faulted to set up match
never having captured 11.
point for Pern!ors, and his third
"I don't need to win Wlm· fl irtation with danger proved
bledon, but I'd like to wln II. I'm disastrous in the final game.
here to give It a try," Connors. 34,
Following a week a! mostly
, said after his 6-1, 6-2, 6-7, 6-3 foul weather, the temperature
victory over New Zealander soared near 90 degrees and
Kelly Evernden.
Mayotte said following the 3 hour
Connors, who faces Sweden's and 25 minute contest, " I felt I
unseeded Mlkael Pernfors for a was definitely outplaying him,
. place In the quarterfi nals, re- and if I had the gas I would have
flected on the pressure of playing put him awa y.
at Wimbledon .
"There' s no way you can train
"You're Intimidated even be· for that kind of humidity when
· lore you arrive," Connors, who It 's no! arou nd every day ,"
won the title In 1974 and 1982, Mayotte said. "I'd have to fly to
said. "You see the place and It's Florida every day ."
even worse. The good thing was
Chris Evert matched Connors,
to get It out of the way . If you can her former fiance, wit h her 15th
wlh It when you're young- and r appeara nce In the round of 16,
was fortunate to do that - it adva ncing along wllh top seed
relieves all the pressure."
Martina Navratilova.
Lendl, a 27-year-old CzechosConnors overcame a Joss of
lovakian who lives In the United co ncentration In the third set to
States, has not be.en so fortuna te. defeat Ever nden, putting In a
Lend! lost to West German superb 81 percent or his fi rst
teenager Boris Becker In last serves.
. year's final. With Becker, the
Navratllova, continu ing her
two- time champion, ousted from qu es t lor what wou ld be a record
· · this year's event, Lend!, the sixth successive crown, and
world's No.1 player, assumes the eighth" overall, breezed past
favorite's role.
Peanut Louie Harper, 6-2, 6-2,
"If I can win Wimbledon and and has conceded on ly eigh t
lose every match In the year, I ga mes In reaching the fourth
will take It," Lend! said.
round for the 13th success ive
Lendl has struggled through year .
his first three matches, one of
Evert, for the second match In
five sets and two goi ng to four. He a row, struggled th rough the
faces South African-born Ameri- opening set before emergi ng with
can Johan Krlek, who has shown a 7-5, 6-0 victory over Kumlko
his grasscourt prowess with two Okamoto of ,Japan. The score
Australian Open titles.
was Identical to her secondConnors will meet Swede Ml- round vic tory over Laura
kael Pernfors today, who ellm t- Gaiarsa .
, nated lOth seed Tim Mayo tte,
" I think I've always been a

.

..

International League Roundup
By United Preu Jntematkiaal
Doug Baker singled home Rey
Palac ios from second base In the
ninth Inning Monday night to lead
the Toledo Mud Hens to a 4·3
victory over the Maine Guides In
Toledo.
Tim Tolman belted his eighth
home run of the season In the!lrst
Inning to give Toledo a 1·0 lead.
The Mud Hens added two more In
the second to jump to a 3-0 leao.
Maine scored two runs In the
third and then one In the seventh
to tie the score at three.
Bill Laskey pitched one Inning
to run his record to 9-1. TQod
Frowlrth dropped to 0·1.
The game was delayed by rain
lor one hour and 41 minutes In the
top oi the third Inning with Toledo
ahead 3-0.
Elsewhere In the International
League, Rochester downed Rich·
mond 6-2, Columbus edged Pawtucket 6-5 In 10 Innings, and
Tidewater beat Syracuse 8-5.
At Rochester, N.Y., Rex
Hudler smacked a three-run
homer In the third Inning to
power the Red Wings past the
Braves. Joe Kuchankt, 2·2, scattered six hits over eight· plus
Innings !or the victory. Eric
Ras mussen recorded the final
two outs !or his eighth save.
Chuck Cary !ell to H .
At Columbus, Ohio, Joel
Skinner drove In the winning run
In the tenth Inning to lead the
Clippers over the Red SOx.
Pawtucket got home runs from
Scott Wade In the seventh and
Sam Horn In the ninth to tie the
score at five. AI Hottand, 2;6,
notched the victory . Hector Sicwart, lett to J.6.
•
At Syracuse, N'.Y., the Tlt1!!s
downed the Chiefs to keep pa~
with the first-pace C!lppen.
Tidewater Improved to 42-32, :a
game and a half back of Coluldbus. Syracuse dropped to 35-41:

,....---------------------f.-:-,

All
Banking
Off ieee
Will Be
Closed

Saturday; July 4, 1987

in observance of Independence Day
Jackson satisfied with baseball efforts
ROSE MONT, II!. (UPI) provide basic education. Jackson
Civil rights leader Jene Jack- said PUSH and other groups aim
son, satisfied with efforts by to Increase minority representa•
baseball owners to Increase tlon In athletic departments.
minority hlrtligs, says he wilt
"We will go university by
urge colleges to follow suit and university to brtlig about this
bring more minorities Into at- change," said Jackson, a l!kely
hletic departments across the Democratic pr esi dential
country .
candidate.
Jackson, . who was In the
Jackson, who founded the civil
northwest Chicago suburb Man· rlghtl organization, led a nation·
day to address the annual Opera· wide effort to Increase minority
tion PUSH convention, also ll!ld parttclpatton In baseball front
he has called off a threatened offices after former Los Angeles
July 4 boycott of major·league Dodgen vice president AI Camgarnett.
pania uld In April blackllacked
He said colleges are ualng the "necessities" to becOme
black athletett but falling to managers .

For your banking convenience •.•
we will open our main offices in
Middleport and Gallipolis

9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Thursday, July 2', 1987
THE
CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY ·. ~; ,

r::::l
L.::._j

• ::·.I :·ppen
....

c= ..
"11"~'~ ..

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, June 30, 1987
Page-6

Beat of the bend

~hawing

a new face

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stall Writer
Middleport's Feeney -Bennett
Post 128, American Legion, wi ll
be showing off
Its new building
at the corner of
Fifth and Mlll
Sts. Saturday as
a part of the
Middleport Ju ly 4th celebration
You 're Invited to drop m to
~ lew the new fa cility and refreshments will be served Denver
H• ce will be providing Ins trum ental entertainment and you know
he plays all of the songs we like
Hours are 2 to op m
. I know where your keys are,
Ti na.
But I just don' t know Tina.
Ralph Graves of G&amp;J Auto
·Parts on Wes t Second St , Pome
roy, reports that someone found
a set of keys - two keys on a ring
which has on 11 a red heart and
the name "Ti na"
Tina ca n pick up the keys at the
G&amp; J
• Pa t Lochary, former Pomeroy
Pos tmaster for man y years. wil l
be mark in g hi s 93rd birthday on
July J and to celebrat e thP
occasion, his family wilt be
holding an open house at hi s
home, l1 4 Hi gh St, Pomeroy The
open house will be on Su nday,
J uly 5, starting at 1 p m
'

'

• The Eastern Athletic Boosters
be stagi ng a chicken bar
becue at the Tuppers Plai ns
F1rehouse this Satu rday - J uly
4ih- beginning at 11 a. m There
was some confu sion on the dinner
and people showed up las t
Saturday to par take So I do want
tOtemlnd you that ll' scomlng up.

will

The lagging publicity opera tion of Buckeye Girls State

fin ally sent us the names of six
more Meigs Count y girls who
attended Buckeye Girls State
held at Ashland College
I've a lways thought it would be
such a great Idea for the Gir ls
States people to put the material
on all of the girls attending the
an nu al event Into one envelope
and send them along as a group,
but then what do I know?
The six add it ionat girls attendmg - and who knov.s maybe
more wil l filt er In - Include
She11 y Cooper, Shan non Slavm,
J Kimber ly Hamm, Audra
Marie llouda she lt , Deean na
Henderson, a ll of Mergs Ht gh,
and Amy Darlene Connolly of
Eastern High
During the week-long event ,
the gi rls learn about living undet
the two party syste m and about
elect to ns and appclntments of
cit y, count y and sta te govern
rn ent officials, sehool boards and
judges They Jea rn by practical
participation to fa ce the functions and problems of govern
ment as well as the ng ht , duties
and responstbtllt tes of America n
Citizenship - excellent tra ining
Mrs Brenda Roush will be
serving as coordinator of the St
.Jude Children's Res Parc h Hospt
tal bt ke-a-thon In Pomeroy and
Brenda Is getting to be a veteran
at thts
St J ude's was fou nded by
enterta mer Da nny Thomas in
1962 and combats catastrophic
diseases wh tC' h aff ltct ch lldt en
We' ll let you know more abo ut
the event when Brenda gives us
the co mplete details The event
is, of cou 1 sc, a fu nd rai ser for the
hosp it al
In casP you didn ' t 1eallze rt
thai was ac tually a little rain
which fell Monday - it' s been a
long, long time has n' t tP Do keep
smlltng

Johnson
birthday

JJ\MITHJ\ M. WILU' ORD

W
. illford
birthday
The first birthda y of Ja mllha
tvla ria Willford was observed
recentlv with a part y al the home
of her pat ent s, Klmix'r lv and
Ra y Willford. Rutland.
A ball oon and bt&gt;ar theme was
ca rried out fm the pat ty Attend
lng a nd presenting gifts to
Jamltha bes ides h&lt;•t pat cnt s
were her gt and pat rn ts. Matlr
and Howa t d Blrehfleld and Cha t
lott e and Bill Willford: her
gt·ea t-grandpat ents , Bernier
Willford and Emmitt and Goldie
!Jightfoot. James a nd Jyl Birchfield, Rob. Jake, Misty Bl!·chfi eld. Teresa Huffman. Margl.
E(lna and Shawna Davis

Scoll M..John son observed his
fifth birthday rece ntly with a
party at the home of his parent s,
M1. and Mrs. Dav id Johnson,
Middleport
A " Popple" cake made by his
aunt , J ill Jo hn son, wa s served
with Ice crea m, chips and koo
laid Eac h child teccived a treat
bag. Ga mes were played and won
by Amber Blackwell, Tiffan y
Priddy, and Shawn Whlt tcklnd
Othets att ending and present Ing gift s wen• his bt other,
J et cmy, urd sister. Kimberly ,
Erica Prlddv, An na, Chris ty and
Ryan Ba reswllt , Ross Stewa r1.
Cherie, Stephen. and Ben See.
Ange l Da y, Tiffany, Kat! and
Apn l Miller, Shari , Ar ica and Agl
Blackwell. Daniel and Nancy
Wh ltt eklnd, Barbara Colmer.
Bll lv Colmer. Mela nie Blevins,
Hyllla E blin, mat ernal grand
mother, Mam ie Stephenson. pa tet·nal grandmoth er. Eve lyn
J ohnso n.
·
Sending gi ft s were Paulett e
Falley a nd family and tho Rev
and Mrs ClydP Henderson

Spencer honored
Angle SpcncL't , an edu ca tion
rnaJOt at Shaw nce Stat e Unl\ ers l!\', has been placed on the
dean's list for spring quatl cr
wllh a perfect 4. A J '&gt;grade point
aVPra ge Is t·equlred for selection
She I th e daughtet of Roger and
.Jean Spencf'r , Tuppers Plains,
nnd a 1485 gradu ate of East ern
Hi gh Sc hool.

Community calendar
THURSDJ\Y
CHESTER - Annual picnic of
the Chester United Methodist
Women will be held Thursday, at
the home of Mrs Clam Conroy,
12 noon. Husbands are Invited
and members are to lake covered
dishes and their own table
service. Hostess will furni s h the
drinks.
.. ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
Township Trustees meeting, 7
p.m. Thursday a t township buildIng, Rock Springs
:' RUTLAND - Rutland VIllage
'Council meellng 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Civic Center, hearing on
1988 budget will be held.
,. '
• POMEROY - Meigs Count y
Lttter Grant Advisory Board will
meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the
Meigs County Extension Service
.Office.
'·
FRIDAY
·:: ~OCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange meeting
7·:30 p.m. Friday at 7:30 p.m ;
;

#-

Slinderella class has meeting

lecturers' prog1·am Inspection;
refres hment s.
POMEROY - Meigs Count y
REACT Tea m 3837 meN ing 8
p .m. Friday a t P leasers
Res ta ut ant
HARRISONVILLE - Sci pio
Township Tr ustees meeting, 7
Frid ay at township
p.m
building.
Tent crusade
Word of Life Ministries tent
crusad e, on Route 681 west of
Darwin, Is In progress through
June 30 at 7 p.m. nightly. The
gospel group " Manna" will be
featured Saturday evening
Missionary services
Harrisonville Holiness Chapel
will be having Rev. Gilbert
Ledsome of Point Pleasant
W.Va. lor missionary services to
be held at the Eblin residence,
39144 State Route 143. Services
will be Wednesday, July 1, 7:30
p.m. Pastor David Ferrell Invites everyone to attend.

Melissa Foster lost the most
weight in the teens class of
Sllnderella at the Mond ay night
meeting of the Five Pom ts class
At the Tuesday meeting of the
class, Kay Hatfi eld lost the most
weekly weight and also recetved
her 20 pcund weight loss r ibbon
and cert ificate, wht le Na ncy

Manley was runner-up.
At the Maso n Wednesday
morning class, the top loser was
Mona Legg and there was a tie
for runner- up between Lois Ann
Rettmire and Dorothy Russell.
Information on classes may be
obtained from JoAnn Newsome,
lecturer

Family Medicine:

Vitamins and dieting
TRJ\VELING - Members of Chester Cub Scout Pack 235 are
pictured with the traveling trophy which the pack was awarded lor
compiling the most points at the annual Cub Scout Olympics In
Middleport. Pictured are front, I to r, Travis Lockwlck, Mark
.Jones, David Vanlnwagen, Eric Dillard, Tyson Rose, David
Johnson: second, Micah Otto, Mike Tuttle: Daniel Otto; back, Eric
Hill, Jeff Stethem, J\ndy Wolle, V. ,f. Van Meter, Jo e Karschnik,
James Clark, Eric Tuttle. Not present for the picture was member
Patrick J\elker.

Cub pack wins trophy
Ches ter Cub Scou 1 Pack 235
was awarded the It aveli ng
trophy at the ann ual 1987 Cub
Olympics held at the Middleport
.Junior High fi eld lo t all cub
packs of Meigs , Mason and
Gallia Counttcs
Cub scout s partlctpated in
various eve nt s throug hout the
day and earned poi nt s for each
even t The traveling troph y wa s
presented to the pac k compiling

and Manl yn Youn g, so n, l-: tt c
Young. and gra ndson Eric Mt
cha~ l . of Stdney and Mrs. f\da
Wat ner . Pomero1 Gt .mdd augh
tcrs m Texas called thetr
congra t ulat 10ns.

TOPS meets, makes report
Peat I Knapp was the best loser
a! the Tuesday ni ght meetm g of
TOPS 570 held at Veterans
Memonal Hos pi!a l ca feter ta.
Run ners-up were Lu ctlle Vance
and 'Jud y Laude rmtll Juam ta
Humphreys won the frutt basket.
ft was noted that begmning

J uly 7 meetings will be he ld a t the
Coon Huntet s Flulldmg on the
Rock Spt ings Faugrounds at 7
p m with welghlns to begi n at 6
p m InformatiOn on th e club
meetings may be obta tned by
call ing Ll nnle Belle Ales hire.
99f-7464, or Vlr gmt a Dea n 9922774

CCL meets
Carol Rupe, dl stttc t pres ident ,
present ed Nancy Morris wtt h "
prestd ent' s pin at the recent
meet mg of the Middl eport Chtld
Conser vat ion League. Becky
Bt oderlck was Installed as rcpor
lcr, and It was a nnounced that
Dar la Kennedy of Rutland was
the wmner of the a nnu al prize

Crusade continues

SCOTT l\1 . ,JOHNSON

Your Social Secunty
By l~ou llorv11th
Field Repre•l' nlativ&lt;'
o, cr 30 million Americans
have Medtrare protect ton Re
cent legtslatto n ha s mtroduced
so me changes In the program.
cha nges that ju st mt ght affect
you or somro ne you know and
aSS ISt

As mos of you know, your
Soctal Secun!l offlcc can help
you com plete your Med tcm c
Part B rei mbursement clatm
forms. However, we're not the
people who process those clatms
Private Insurance co mpant es
contract with the gover nment to
process and pa)' Part A and Part
B claims In Ohio. Blue Cross
handles the Part A hospita l
Insura nce and Na tionw ide Insurance ts the contractor lor
reim burse ment s of medical ser
vices under Part B
Effect ive April I. the carriers
are rl'qulred to pay certain Part
A a nd Part B clat ms wlthm thirty
da ys of receipt The requi remen t

sound ?

J\nswer: Amet·lca ns spe nd $2.5
billion eac h VL'a t on vttamm and
mine ra l s upp lem~n t So me pco
plr usc vt lamtns bccausr thc\ ' n•
cur btng thc11 food tnt ake or
missing thc proper nutn f' nt s tn
thrtr dtel Oth r t s thrnk th at

the most pomt s for the day. t dkJn g v il uml ns wtll prP\'C'n l
Indi vidual trophtes were ptes
drs ras~
prolong ltfe. tn creasc
ented In each age group.
al hlPl iC p rowf'ss or boost srxu al
Jon Karschnlk IS cubma ster of --potencv
the wmnmg Chester Pack and J o
In ft~ l't. 1 c•spnJch bv thr Am r1 t
Ann Newsome ts commi tt ee can Di eteti c AssociatiOn and the
chairman
Food ancl Drug Admmrstt ,tlton
The nex t dis trict event wtll be offf'rs scant pt nof lot these
Cub Scout Da y Ca mp at Ca mp elatms For exa mpl i'. thetc's
Klas hut a In Ches ter the week of Ii iii(' evtdCnLP thai la ktng caJ.July 20-24. The cos t will be $12 per UUm supp lement s alon f' pt e
seoul and $o for an adult
·ve nt s ostf'o pot osts I ' briii iP
bo ors")
Question: But aren't vtt am tns

Roush birthday is observed
The 80t h bit thday of Edson
Roush was celebra ted tr•rcntl y
with a family part y. Att end mg
were Mr a nd Mrs Rou sh s
dau ght ers . Rd rbat a. an d het
hu sband, Walt er Watson, Kent.

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
&lt;\sslstant Professo r
ol Family Medicine
Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
Question : I d d t&lt;• ltng bu t l'm
takm g vtt amlns to compensa te
for nutri ents I mav b~ lackmg Is
thi s p rac tt ce nulrtttonal lv

The Word of Life Mmlstrles
will conti nue tis miracle and
dell vera ncete nt cru sade th rough
the fir st week of July The tent
crusade Is location on Sta te
Route 681 wes t, three miles wes t
of Da rwm . Services sta rt a t 7
p m each evenin g

A, D E and K, vtta mm C (whtch
ou t bodi es ca nnot produce) and
eight B vlt amtns The absence of
any of these nutrrents can cause
til ness
Manv perfectly healthy people
take large doses of vt tamm s- as
manv as fi ve or 10 times the
recommended da ily allowance
Vita min overdose ca n ca use
adverse stde effects or even
dea th
Question: Is there anvone who
should take li it amms?
Answer: Some peopiP, such as
pregnan t womcn and Vl'ge!at
ta ns, may need nutritiona l
boosts. Pregna nt women require
extra doses of rl tetary nutrients
su&lt; h dS calcium. lt·on a nd folic
actd Strict veget anans who
avo id milk. eggs and other da try
produc ts oerasronall y need tron,
cale tum and vtt amin B-12m their
diet
P~o pl ~ who lose blood during
surgPry and hcav tly menstrual
rng v.omrn often require Iron
suppl emen ts. Also. people whose
bloodstream s ca nnot absorb vlta mtn &gt; m ay nee d v itamin

0SSf' ntla l to good hPa lth ?

mwctwns

J\nswer: Y ~s . bul the best
source of l'ilamms ts a wel l
bala n&lt;ed select ton !t om !hi' four
food gt cups not It om su pple•
m•• nl s Out bodics requi re J:l
C'SSf'n11a l vit amins to s urv tv£1
Thr.v a rf' I he fat soluble vtt amlns

Thc Vl! amm mdu stry makes
bi lltons of dol l,tt s because many
pcoplr take vr tamlns lndt sc rtmlnatr lv and needl ess ly. Try to eat
a balanced dtel and sec your
doctor 01 diel ttta n before taking
nutt t! tonal supplements
'•

Kennedy birthday is observed
Gregory David Kennedy , son
of Mtk e and Deena Kennedy,
Pomerov. celebra ted his fir st
bitthda y tecentl y wtth two
panics .
A Pound Puppy theme was
ca n ted out m the cakes and
decoratio ns Hefrc s hm etrns
v. ere served a I bot h parties
Altendm g the ftrst pa rty were
Mt and Mrs Charles Neece J t ,
Mt s. Ja ntce Haggy, Deanna and
Ahcta , Mr. and Mrs Ja mes
Smtih, t.mdsey and Jos hua, Mr.
and Mrs Charl te Neece, Miss
Shar i Drehcl. Mrs Phyllis Drehel. and Mrs. Ter rv Neece,
Ch rtsty and Chrtstopher.
'
At the second part y were Mr
and Mrs. Ed Kennedy, Mr and
Mrs Wt lliam Kennedy, Mr. and
Mrs Chat les Stra uss, Debbie
Kennedy, Mt and Mrs. John
Thomas, Adam and Bra ndi and
Greg 's stster, J ennifer. three.
Sending gr its were Mr. and
Mrs. Char les Neece, Sr. a nd
.lack. Mr and Mt·s Cha r les

Kenn edy and Da vid Scott , and
Mtk e Kenn edy

Tuesda • June 30, 1987

Pub:~CT~;tice
COMMON PLEAS COURT

PROBATE DIVISION

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF

~~g~~~ET~OURT

nal and Distnbut1ve Account
of Peart H Swam, Jr, Ad m1n11trator of the Estate of
Florence Anna Bay, Deceased

Backhoe Semce
Plumbmg Serv1ce

We Carry Concrete Cul,erts

Fourth and Current Account

L1censed 81 Bonded

of Ed11on Hobstetter, Truo-

WILLIAMS

Will of Hame Mane Smith,
Oeceooad
ESTATE NO . 24102 _
Secon d Account of Denver

Rt 4 Hysell Run Road
Pom!!oy, Ohto 45769
PH (6141992-2834 01
992 -6704 - free Estimates
L. R1ce and Nora E R1ce,
Guardians of the Person and l'"-----...;.
1.;;!3..;·2..;.m;;•.J

MIDDLEPORT JULY 4th
PARADE ENTRY

Theme: 200 Years ·~nd Still Waving
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Type of Entry - - - - - - - - - , - - - - Drcanization or Business _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Individual in Charae _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

You ca n still call your Soc ial
Secun tv off ice to get information
about Medica re or any ot her
Social Securit y program. We're

RESIO ENTIA LI CO MMER C!Al

ESTATE NO. 26400 - Fi-

ESTATE NO 25379 - Fi-

HEATING &amp; COOLING

ESTATE NO 24864 - FI-

nal and D1stnbut1ve Account

Restdenttal and small com-

ministrator of the Estate of
Sara E. Murphy, Deceased

mereta! un1ts Installation of
duct work, hum1d1hers fur
nace heat pumps. and a1r con·
d1t1ontng

of Wilham G. Murphy, AdESTATE NO. 19404 -

Third Currant Account of
Patrick H. O'Bnan, Guardian

All work guaranteed Call·
(614) 985-4122 (reSidence)
'Spectal HElL package central
an condttonmg for mobtle or

of Mary E Russell
Unless exceptions are ftl·
ed thereto, said accounts
will be for heanns; before
satd Court on the 4th dav of
August, 1987, at wt;tich
t1me aa1d accounts w1ll be
conaidarad and contmued
from day to day until fmally
diSposed of .
Any penon Interested
mav ftle written exceptions
to tatd accounts or to matt·
era perta1nmg to the executiOn of the trust. not leas
than five days prior to the
date sat for haartng

modular homes Installed on
pad and ready to cool Pnce·

Middloport, Ohio
1-13-tlc

HUDNALL

1bl North S.cond'
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry

Flthlng Suppltel

Pay Your Cable t!t
Phono Bills Hore
'

I IUIINISS PHON!

Women's, Men's and
Children's

"Devon" Sale Priced
IChakiGro..
White Groop
(Pants, Jackets, Skirts,
Blouses)

"Cricket lane" White
linen-look Jacket with
multi-colored skirts.
"Cricket '-" Striped Jackets

EAGLES CWI-POMIROT, OH.
IHUR~

10 Hard (ur d

Par•de forms at 12:15 p.m. Slturdly at Diles Park. movinc down Third
to H1rtincar Ptrkwly, then up Second. then to Front St.

··, •·

I

C"· I ~ points space x
1 ... J, D ••

rniiQ nntnt~ &lt;en,.,..

still dol•t •••
"hit".

t18.000

RACINE, OHIO

No

~tiling ,

repht

bustn•• Set your own houri
Trainlnt provided Csll 1 812
938·8870, M -F, Btm to 5pm
iCentrtl Stlnderd Timtl

Babysitt• needed Rio Grende
area Call 6U·· 682·7373

Fin a11ci al

polntments 9 to 12 AM . 6 to9
PM t3 50/ hour plua bom1111

Business
Opportunity

21

949-2263
or 949-2168

4-11-87-lfn

949 • 2 748

•

L&amp;W CLEANING
CAIPO
UPHOLSTERY PLUS

446-6323 .~~:•.
Any 2 Rooms ond
Hall - 144_ 95
Any 3 Rooms and
Hall - '59.95
Any S Rooms and
Hall - '94.95

1/1""

'Uill( lltVITID _

__

Real Estate General

DENNY CONGO
WI-LL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL ·SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

FARMERS BANK
992-2136

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

jUso Tran1mlulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

6-17-tfc

4-16-86-lfn

•VINYl SIDING

Anno unc r. me111 s

"ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN

Working Chef wanted for 100
aeet ret1eurant with amall benquet facilities 120,000, plua

beneflto Sand ••oumo to Box
1C86, ,.o (lolllpollo 010ly Tribune. 826 Third Avenue Gtlllpo·

3 Announcements

INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Control your Welgh"t·Take " New

New Homes Built

Control your Weight Teke ' 'New
Shape Diet Plan ' and •o fad
temphol.,.torot too hlgh1 lower It

Shape Diet Plan " and E·Vtp
Wettr Pillt Fruth Pharmacy

"froo Esttmatas"

PH. 949·2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday Calls

with Heert·Fio f1th·o1l captulf!lll
Fruth Pharmacy

·

3-11-tfn

Cept1ln D's All You Can Ett Flth
D•nner Sundty. July 5th 11 .30

(CUT OUT rOR fUTURE USE!

4 00 1t the Southem High
School Ctfetetlt, Rtclne Spon·
sored by the Southern Btnd
Advance ticiUtll for au• 13

-.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends thet you
do busln81a with people you
know, end NOT to send money
through the mall until vou hwe

mve1tlg.ted the ofl•ing

23

Professional
Services

NOTICE. Huston' s Welding tnd

Ftbrlc:ttlon sert.~lng your trtt
We weld enythlng hom cut Iron
to alumn Service factorl11 ,
tru cktng or lndtvldutlt It rou
need som.-hlng bulh or repaired

coil !14-!82-7122.

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Rafrigeralors
•Drye rs •Freenrs

PARTS and SERVICE

4 5 1fc

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB

f!

GOLF
LESSONS
' 8.00
NEW
GRIPS
' 3.00

TROPHIES
PLAQUES
BADGES
JOHN TEAFORD

Prolooslonal

CHESTO, OHIO 45720

61587 tmo

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
Truck. auto. &amp;
heavy equtpment
repairs and
welding.
(All makes t!t modolsl

PH. 949-2756
John K. Bentz

Owner/Mechanic
S· S·'I1•3 mo.

WELLMAN'S
PAIN1'1NG &amp;
SANDILIS1'1NG
tNDUSitttAL

s....,•• u.,

I'll CtMt To Y11. Porlt.lo
MASONRY IISIOIAIION,
SWIM POOl~ STill, IAINS,
FAIIIHG IOU"MENT,
HOU!IS, !rOH FIONIS, nc

8·29· 1 mo

YOUNG'S
-

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addont and remodeltng
Rooi lng and gUtter work
Concret e work
Plumbing tnd ehJctricel
WOfk

(Free E1t1mat"l

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -6215 ... 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4 15-86-lc

BOGGS

SALE~ &amp;

SERVICE

U. SL RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Aufhoriud John Doort,
· Now Holland, lush Hog
Farm lq•Jipmont
Dooler

flr111 Eq•l~111.. t
Pert• &amp; Servlee

--

1-3-'86 tfc

Mdlnt. ..._.... Wlndowt N 4th

lt.. M..._rt , Make otftr

114-247-441n or 81•' 2•72132
Govtrl'lte;et t Hom• for t1 00
(U .......,. Buy Direct! Repot

end T• Delinquent Properti,.
Ott tM fllltl tod.yl Ctlllrefun-

doblol t-118-4!9-3!41 Ext

Call 114· 817·8512

Sttn vour own bullneu t Become 1 Wttklnt dttlll" Full Of
PI" time oppottunltln IVtll•
blo. Colt etc-992 7183 lor
morelnlormttkm

GOVERNMENT JOBS
118.0.CO • 159,230 V' Now
Hiring Coli 80! !87-6000 Ext
A·980&amp; tor current ftdtrtllltt

31

Es! al1:

Homes for Sale

New 4BR , 2 btth, Cltrk Or
•u 000. Newly rtmodled Hs
28R. 122.000 In Add lton CtU

•4&amp;-8889

••For Sale or lt11t""
4 BR 2 beth, full bas~~ment , with
lboveground pool &amp; XL dack on
1/ 2 tcra tcrott from AddiVMit
grlllt IChOOI Flntnclng IVtll•
ble with tmtll doWn payment
Priced thou11nd1 below ep·
prtlttd vtlua Ctll Beb 91 8·

wind~•

and stortgt

2•so

8 room t.use. Ron Hill Pom•
~. Oh 1.3 tcr" t17,000 AI
Newty .,._,.led 3 bedroom
houae fM .-. or rent on llncotn

Hto 114-ltz 7!89 oftor

liiOOpm

3 bedroetM. 1 Hc:h living room ,
din6ng room, kltchtn end den
Fwll bM,-..nt whh fuel oil or
woe4 ~1"1 fvmRe. c•pol't,
out · ~

tftUerhook-up, 1 ~

eore •21.000 Will conlidtr
IW ......... at t ptJctnt Call
IU··'741-tt32 evenlnga efter

1:00.

I rOOMI.-. bath Nlcelocttlon

on OI'IM It Nawty remodllld

larga lot. olose to 1chool tod
churchel Priced rlltonabla

Colt 8tc-H2 72•4

By 0... · Prict rlductd 3 br,
1 'if~ ~ llnlng, rec:r•.tl6h

l'fOgo. 304-8711;

ooom, l •

4804

AH . . . . 1 'h ICtll, FHA tP·
prowil City weter, outbldat.
prfwlt.. lh. 2 12 min from fit

., on.-

304-69!-3881

Owntr witt flnlft'Ce 3 br, dlnln'g',
ftm room·W•Iturntr, 2 .,.lht,
cent lb. 2 · CI~ o•r , 2 outbldge

304-871 !113

4 II I. II F • city Wlttt avtlltbl~

Jeny R• Raid. 3 mlln off fh
2,

_,,__2111

' '•

M4i1ilie Homes

32

.,

for S•le

'

' '
NEW AND UIED MOBILE
HOMES KISIEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4'Ml
WEST, 8AlUPOLIS, RT a,
PHOIIII! II 4-441-7274.

2 BA 10 vr.. mint condition
buutliul location, N. .r Nor·
thup Ptlced right or will trlde

Rem..._ 1170 Htltft'ltril

Colt !t4-2!1-e200

HIRING! Oovernmentjobt, your

BuutlfiAI brick houtt looeted 4
mlln out 141 8 room•. lull
tlaumtnt , ttttched g~rtgs

!02·838·8891 Ext 14•8

gtr~ge

cerpetlne.

lovelv niW 3 BR home built thlt
tprlng 2 ctr gartgt. nice trll,
Ctav &amp; city tf;lhoolt, 6 mlln
grom Oalllpollt WHI contlder
mobile hom• u trtde · ln .
U7,600 Ctl 814·448·8031

_______ ,

er11 t1S .OOO - 188.000 Call

3 tt.droewt.. Stonn

781 21!2

Dentel A11l1t1nt full time In
Columbut, Ohio Mult be non·
tmok• Pick up appllcttlont It
208 N. 2nd Ave. Middlaport,
Oh•o tnd tend to 446 W
Schrock Rd • Wttttrvllle. Ohio

430B1

Mt~

3 bedroomt. 2 bttht, cenrrtltlr,

2 ctr garage In Merctrvlle

139,000 Cell 814· 4411·71110

1 25 ecr" Ce1UU4·441 4831

~ 't

bile HeiN. 12d2 2 ledroo~l.
••aoo. Coli tt 4·888·1!88 •·

1171 I I~ mobllo hom~
bothltt MftCNtjon Call d14\
216-1HI Oflt4-218-1517 ,;
14x70 I ltll totll lle:cthc.
bloeU. .....,..nftlng, tundaeklr
st.,.. c.ll.tler7pm, 614·367

7217

1111 · - · 2 IR, toto!
S4.101-lllollet•-3U-8724.

• - ~·tnv lnoludld,
•

or at the High School Office.
at door 14 !iiO and
12 7!

Giveaway

Puppl" 6 weeki old &amp; wormed
Call614·266 ·1188.
C1hco cat to gtveawey

6U·4·6-3768

Call

Ktttent . 6 wkl Weanld Gray
strtpe One til grty Ce" 114·

446 9536

Appo11 6 tcr" hev you cut &amp;.
Netr Rotln.-y Ctll

remove

614 446-204!

Bleck male long·htlred kilttn

Coli 814-949 23!9

Two blecil kittens. mele, shlney
tur 8 week• old 304· 89&amp;·

3420

2 puppiet pen Shepherd dog.

304-676-3626 '

3 klnant , litter boll lrtlntd,
304·675-&amp;141 eftM 3 :00pm

Helttng '&amp; Air Conditioning
ttrvlc•men tlto lntttllttlon
man with •• le••t 5 yttn
••perlence Rtply to Boa C·23 ,
ctre P1 PI Raglttar, 200 Meln
St Pl PI, WV.

LAB TECH

Jtc:llton General Hotp, Alply, W
Vtlt tcceptlng tppllcltlont for 1
full tirnt medical Lib Tec:hnldtn.
quellfltd tpplicant, will hll¥t 1 2
or • ytlr degrlt In Medlcll
TechnoloGY end 1 current A&amp;CP
Rtgittry. Hotpittl ofltrl tMctl·
lent 11l~~ry tnd benetltt for more
lnformttlon call , Ptuonnel Dirt·
cotr 304-372· 2731 or apply at

Hotpittl butlin111 oHi ce

Sloat and Found
Lott cat. long helrtd mtlt Ttn&amp;
brown Sltmtu mtrklng
Brown collar 32&amp; netr Rk»
Grtndt Rewtrd Ctll 614-446·

9&amp;33

l ott One mtle Aut1raUtn Sh•
pherd dog Orty Ntme: Mice•
Hidden Velley Rtnch e re• At·
Wtrd Clll 114· 440·1720

Ml11lng vellow &amp; white mtle
thorthtlred c.. with 3 '-f•· ti81
htahh problem that requlr11
continuous Clrl sndmedlcttlon
Hit ntmt it "Chert"" tnd It
ml111d "'ttV much Llt1 '""
FridiV June 12 tt Dr. Allan
Bolttr' t office, It you'w '""
him or hevt lnformttion tbout
him pl1111 conttct Dr Bot
ttr't office, 441·97152 . It Is
lmplfttlve1hlt we find him

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

JTPA·OTP. U you wtnt training
in tht followtng tfllt THE
OCCUPATIONAL TRAININQ
PROGRAM It who you nHd.
Tttlntng potitfont will betvtll•
bit In libflry work, Outreach
work, Werehou11. tlong whh
tht op portun ity to tchltvt your
OED It vou trt ln ttretted you
mull be between 22 end I&amp;
.,...,s old, 1 rttldlfnt ot Maton
Countv brln; th1 followlog
lnformttlon tor elig ibility certHI·
cedon. Driven licentt, rent
receipt or utllltv bUll. to prove
retkltnee Birth ctt11flctdon
eocllltecuthy or voltrt ttglsler •
etlon Prooi of the amount of
itmlfy' 1 Income tor tht pan I
montht. check ttubt tnd IllY

t'1PII of public ttt ltttntt or
unlf'l'lploym.nt benefht you art
rtceivlng. If you trt htndl·
ctpptd prov1de proof of ldentHI·
ctt5oft for htndleap atetus. ell
mtlet born efttr Jtn 1. 1960
mutt htvt 1 ttlactlvt drait
numb•. ConUICI tht Employ
m.nt Sac:urhv Oftlce tt 226
Sl11th St. Po int Plttttntor phone

304-876-2770 .. Ju~ 6th An
EEO Employer

Rick Purson Auctlonttr II
ctnttd In Ohio tnd Wnt Vlrgl·
nit Rul Etttte 1ntlqua. ftrm,
hqu•de,lon 11111 304 .773
6786 or n3·5430

9

Wanted To Buy

Work GulftntHd

FREE ESTIMATES
Cal 614·446-~0211

--lbotho,n-raoJ.

I

Tu~keu

•ntD£NnAt

COMMIICIA~

lnttruc:lor naedad by 1tete
beauty college Immediate open·
In; Dev even in; full pert time

Ri!~l

through lldullt, •• 25 . undlf
13, 12 60 These ticket a mtv bt
obtained from any band member

4

985-3561
All Mtk11

Director for Educttlontl Cooptflthlaln Athent M•nagecooperative purchnlng tnd lntu·
ranee program Prater
manag•l•l or aducatlon tdmlnlttratlon experience *20,000
rtnge Verloue benefltt Letter of
tppllcttlon and resume tc·
cepteduntt1Jutv31 Mtllto Dr
Nell Johnton Pretldent
SEOVEC CO Gtlllt County
Schooll, 220 Jadtton Pike,
Gtlllpo11s, OH 46831

Wanted Retell Hardwtrl Cleric
Send Aatuma to Bo-. 4116
Ollllpollt. Oh1o 45631

Wt PlY ceth tot ltle mode4 cl11n
Uled Clfl

J im Mink Chtv ·Oidt Inc
Bill Grene John ton

614-«!-3872

HOMES
FOR SALE

CALL ·

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

"At Reasonable Prices"

611211 mo

10-8-tfc

FOR MORE
INFORIIATION

Rt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

•

~~1\ll'lll

l k. 1011-tl h,.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

C_ _ ... IU-88&amp; · 3~71

Mortlo 11•·17B-2!13

Coli 614-•48-3616

Roger Hysell
Garage

BISSELL
BUILDERS

vlll~ge of Cn111er.
It '24 ,900.

H.u• •

Ohkt. llilllwain

building Mutt tell Su Fred
Willi.mson or cell 814 -742 ·

Telephone Survey to meke ep-

,---------~----.::5;,:
· 1::,8·.,:'8::,7;,;:1f:::n-'-l

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

wo•h lh1~ ud nnrl p .. rrhl!l,
of rn'""" rn por~nqo
lrrrrl 1 p~r rulloro'" p••

ed Run.

so ••d

ltwn mowers repair, odd jobt,
ltwn cutting. 304- 87.6· 1553

UO,OOO. part· tlme. •12.000

FREE
ESTIMATES
ALLWORK
GUARANTEED

General Contractors

wave New Haven, MIIOfl,
ltltrt, Wnt Colum~t. Point
Pltltnt aru Phone 304-773·
5410 or wrht Ctrlol Martin,
8ok 3tS·B West Columbia. W

lllrlng In your area. bo1h slciiiM
and untkilled For 1111 of jobt and
applicatton Ca11616-383·2827
E11t J -4&amp;2

BELL CONSTRUCTION

NEW- REPAIR

~

8111CjO

Writesel

ROOFING

;· Hord I n•rh fl/f I

Curtis Hollow entrafKt to Fork-

It lOW

Send entry to Roaer Willi•ms.785 Dock St. , Middleport, Ohio 45760 or
telephone Willi11111s 11 992-5319.

Howard L.

Any li•ing Room

•Locotwd in Lang lol·

Petty .lta11111

1-22 87-1 mo pd

&amp; Hall - 134.95

lam MOr

Phone - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Ph. (6141 843-5425

l!V"l I !0 PHJPlf
~~.~ II" qtl''"'

the pool.

ON THE ''T" IN IQDDL~PORT

CAll:

Gnmt~

Hartinger Park way
in Micldltport ntar

REDUCED

EUGENE LONG

~HlP'' qo'"'

•LO&lt;attd on General

SALE PRICED
RACK- SUMMER BLOUSES
lACK - SUMMER SKillS

VINYl &amp; AlUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Rooling of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years
"Free Est1mates"

I 'M- Il 6,41

Meigs Countv Board of
Mental Ret1rdation reserves
the right 10 accept or reject

Happy Ads

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

I fil8 ttln

August 10, 1987

5

RIAIONABLI - RlliAill
8-20-'86 tin

16141 "2-7754

regular Board meeting on

(61 29, 30: (71 1. 3tc

614-843-5248

IISIDINCI PHON!

P 0 Box 3· 7
Syracuse. Ohio 46779
814-992 -8681
Bido will be oworded at the

Keith Block

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

16141 992-6550

btd details may bl!l obtained
b¥ contacting:
Mr Ka1th Black f
Operations D1rector

Operation• Director

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

' PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Public Notice

any or all bids.

J.R.'s REPAIRS

992-2196

Operations Director

I

6-187lmo

PAT HILL FORD

161 16, 23, 30: 171 7, 4tc

period of August 24, 1986
through June 30. t988
Bids are to be malted to the
addreu below: and Specific

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Jonuerv 31 . 1988
Ke1th Black

Delivery Will be made to
the Carleton School for the

•lnsulatton
•Storm Doors
•Storm Wmdows
•Replacement W1ndows
•New Roofing

RADIATOR
SERVICE

4 00 P M on August 3,
1987. at the Me1gs County
Board of MR / 00, P 0 Box
307, Syracuse. Oh10 45779,

far the 87/ 88 ochool vee•
BREAD AND
BREAD PRODUCTS
MILK end MILK PRODUCTS
GASOLINE AND

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

11199 00 plus'"
or a HEtl2'11 ton Heat Pump tn·
stalled on yO!Jr eleclnc fun\OCe
Pnce. $1699.00 plus tax I-2B

Judge

mail for the following •upplin and products needed

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

511/lln

Bids w1ll be rece1ved until

SUMER WEAR
REDUCED

6-187-1 mo

"FREE ESTIMATES"

nal and D1stnbut1ve Account
of Sonja Sue Wayland, Executrix ot the Estate of Erma
J . Hendnx , Deceased

DIESEL FUEL

REDUCED

PH. 992-2772

FREE ESTIMATES

nal and D1stnbut1ve Account
of James 0. Goma, Executor
of the Estate of Pauline R
Bentley, Deceased

Bids will be reca1ved until

.

FREE ESTIMATES

Lat Us Fence You In

ESTATE NO 25148 -

PUBLIC NOTICE

1 IACI
GilLS' &amp; BOYS'

POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

Farm labor. odd jobs, etc ior min.

GOVERNMENT JOBS! Now

NEW HOMES
RESIDENTIAL
RENOVATIONS

CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

742 308t

Homaa for Sale

31

H13110 . .

8-13tfn

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION

FENCE COMPANY

First Annual Account of Tma
Marie Colhns, Guardian of
the Estate of Tracy Dawn
Colltns and Wendi Michelle
Collins

4·00 p.m July 31 . 1987 by

11 Help Wanted

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

6-30-1 n1o

ACCENT

nal and Distributive Account
of Jav C Ru~aell, Administrator of the Estate of Truman A. Russell , Deceased

Public Notice

JULY
4TH
SALE
ALL SWIMWEAR

PH. 949-2969
BUY - SELL-TRADE

Llwn mowtt repair Will pldl. up
and dtUvtr. Also light hMtllnl
Call e14-742·2393 or 11 •

Vo

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213

CLOSED SUNDAY

18 Wanted to Do

ploOH

ESTATE NO 24235 - Fi-

PUBLIC NOTICE

St:IVlt:I:S

Ua. Oh 4&amp;831

Meigs Coonty, Ohio
(61 30. 1tc

open Monda y throug h Friday
from 8:45a .m. to 4: 30 p m and
our local number Is 992 6ti22

Mondey· Saturday

Estate of W1lham Lloyd R1ce .
en Incompetent

Medicare changes and your forms
applies to what arc called ''clea n
cla tms ", the ones that need no
add it tonal informal ion or mves1 1
ga tion to be processed Fm P art
Fl . lhts applies primar ily to bills
whet e the physic tan has at·
cepled the Medicare appro\ ed
rate as payment
Let 's expla in that last comment before we go any fu rt her.
Medicare es tabli shes a n approved (or assig ned ) payment
amo unt for specific services
based on the lower of the
prevailing charge for that service or your phys ician's usual fee
fm that treatment Once the
annual $i5 deduct abl e amount Is
m~t. the Medicare 1 ei mbursement Is 80 percent of the
approved ra te. You are responsible for the remaining 20 percent
However, if you r physicia n
charges you more than the go in g
rate for some trea tment , the
Mediare pay ment does n't increase. It will be based on the
approved amount only .

PARTS • SERVI((
Repairs on All Makeo
Transaxle Repairs~
a: LISA M KOCH 0 MS
lO&lt;atod Halfway lotwHn
•
'
•
,.. Licensed Clinical Audiologist
Rt. 7 and llashan
.._
HRS · 12:00·6·00
~ (614) 446·7619 Or (614) 992-6601

TRENCHING SERVICE

tee of the Trust Under the

Common Pleas Court,
Probata Division,

GREGORY D. KENNEDY

ze, Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

Custom Weldmr
lowboy Hauling
SeptiCSystems

ESTATE NO 21042 -

Delivery will be required by

TOP CASH pokl fo• '83 modo!

Reps Needed for butintlt ec
countt. FuiHtmt t60.000 ·

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
l!enchtng of Any Type

Black at the MCBMR / 00 or
by calling 614-992-6681

Wanted To Buy

newer used cars Smith

Clark. Deceaoed
ESTATE NO 26061 - F1-

for the following vehicle
purchase
11) unlt· dlesel -41 pauenger conventional school bus
Chassis and body to be btd
as a complete umt. Com·
plata btd specifiCations may
be obtatned froiJl. Keith

9

tr====~==~:.==::;1ir:=;;;:;;;=::;t=======::;::=r:========:fl•nd
8uoc:I&lt;-Pontioc, 1911 E11tem
MARCUM
EAGLE RIDGE
Ave ' GolllpoUo CoH 8U-«82282.
CONTRACTING
sMAgN\~:INE
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
------[ ll ipiiiVIIII:lll

nal and Distributive Account
of Alice M. Russell, Execu trix of the Estate of Ethel N.

B~ck ,

The Daly bldtlll Page-7

Business Services

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CHiml, OHIO
Account• and vouchen of •ROOFING •SIDING
the following named fiduci - •WINQOW REPLACEMENT
ari81 have bHn flied in the
•REMODELING &amp;
Probatre Court, Meigs
ROOM ADDITIONS
County. Oh1o. for approval •GARAGEs &amp; POLE
and oettlement
BUILDINGS
ESTATE NO 26147- FiREFERENCES
naland Distributive Account Phone Day or Evenings
of Milton E. Rouoh, Execu985-4 14 1
tor of the Estate of George
M. Freeland, Deceased.
GINIUL CONTRACTORS
ESTATE NO 24972 - Fl- .._ _ _...;;6..;.10;;.;;17..;1,;;m;;;•~P:;:;d.J

Robert E.

''

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wanted ro buy good ut.clelect·
ric 30" ttovt. Call 8t4.2!1&amp;.

1393,

12

Situations
Wanted

Mowtng, tnmmlnv. odd job•

Colt 814-992-8!89

8rendt tak• cert ot ald.,ly
people in her home 10 yrt

••.,.ienc. Loving
!t4-892 1140.

eara. Ctll

Erptr lenc.ld lldy will do baby
tht lng In mv homt Mondev thru
Frldt¥, Call304 · n3· 157&amp;0 eiter

• 30

Slttn uMd from hooN roolt·

Witt plc:l&lt; op Coli 304-372 ' 18 Wanted to Do
4099
Burlng dtlty gold, tltvlf colnt,
nngt, jewelry, "'"'"'ware, otd
c&lt;Mnt, l•o•
Top Pf'lc" Ed lurkttt Btrbet Shop,
2nd Aw Mktdlepott, Oh 114·

"""'"CJ

992-3471
QUILTS

Cuh pafd ror coUeetor antique
or pre 1850 quits Pieced or

-!que Any COtldltlon Hi&lt;lhl&lt;
prle~~ .,.td fOf unutuM patt8mt
Colt More It 114·H2-2101

days or 1-812·2•tt tweningt or
wethndt.

------

Wtnttd tO buy: , . . Hondt

for '14. KL 100 motorcycle CoU14·7•2·2114.
Wonted to buy. OUndJnG timber
Coil AI T•omm 01 11··742
2321
wheof

Jim 't odd jobs plintlna. drtv ..
WI\' r1111Ung, Cll'ptmtr WOtil &amp;:
roof r~p~ir, tre" • hedg•
••p•rlenctd Ctll 114· 378 ·

24tl.

J im'• Odd jobt. p~ntlng, drlv•
wey , ....Uno. etrptrtter work It
roof rtpalr. ,,... It hMg ...
tkptrlencad Ph 814 ·378·

2411.

HouttitMPfna Cell bttwHn 12

• 4. 114-311-1728.

Will tteth to awknl Ult Gutrd
(Will 2 '" ooporllflco Ololo
ltlta, 1 yr . Ctty pool. Cell

614-«!-1307-Lturo Am"""'
Con do ligltt houllng ond roo ling.
Reuoneble retea Mtrlon
lnkl•-e1o1-..1-2121

'i a«i sale•

------·Ganrpons-·-------- • * I . 11J.

I II :.r and Thurtd"l
Union
vt
.:.s:~ ~hMdrens clathlno tnd

Wt

&amp; Vicinity

II••

""""--M1mo. I 00·1. .

At 1M ...... of Rt 7 lf'HI

3 ftmlty gtrage 1111 rein or
shin• July 1,2,&amp;3 Onamlltout

Georgn Creek Rd. Followslgnt
Btrgtlnt Galorel

Out 141 , I mi .· 3 &amp; mi. on775
AC, CB • ant 161n 11rn, tur!" .
homelnt • billa. pic tbl , clothn

FOt"rllt ,._ "d L.Jroa etleotl6"
tnd ltrfli ... " t 00·4 00 J~lv

1.2.3

w- ,_It,

Huge yeN! Nit July 11t jiWu
4th.
8 till dttk
!th It Roctno

w.... . ...

21-30-t .

3 f""""', July 2nd, 3•d. 41h
...,.. Rt k'l tron1 of Btthln

3 Family Ylf'd Stte· July 2 6 3.
Routt ?71 Children' • cloth.,,
bed, couch • chllr, ''""'

FifO.,._

July 1 &amp;. 2 . R I 7 aoro11 from
Blue Founttln Mote4 Mltct4·
ltneou• ltemt
Gettge Salt Down from Addt•
vUlt tchool. on Addison Rd Kl"g
Size Wlttrbtd , tterto tylttm.
furniture , ctr· 1973 Dodge Dtrt,
clothu , mu c h mora, July

1,2,3! 8-6

----- --p·am'iirov·-- -- -Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
HouMhold furniture and yard
ttlt. 814·982· 3!143 July ht,
2nd , tnd Jrd 9 00 · &amp; 00
Outen·tluld and fult sized hid•
a· Nd1. toft and chtlr, recliner
and love couch wood kitchtn
dinene and chalrt, baby hor11
wtlklf. and clothn. Naw le·
Vtlor 811ndt, VtriOUI IIZII
lfi 00 etch Chlldftn and tdutt

clothn. til tillt•tome new
Jeant, ltmp tnd mite, new hot
weter hatter bltnltet. •• 00
Tools 1oys. bow11nv ball. 1 mile
e.. t ot Ru11tnd. 372116 St At
124 bltwHn Euon and Sub

Bar... lilt' Aowley rMidenC•
on llhr
Rd .. Pom•ov

t.OO·•·oo

"u"
July 1st tnd 2nd

Flrll .,.... ...,... Iandi titwWr

1111Pn nw flor"' Run Rd., 2

mMII Rt 7 8·00-3 00&lt;
F~...... Jflily Jrd.

31""""1- ~It Rutlond Jdtv
2ndMJo4 1.00·400 • '.,
4 famity. I~ ttovt, d lt~h~~
pote.,... ,..., olothln~Movln
Nte "Will Meldt I
Wh

J""

-~R~ . Ith 0U11 ~ 1
101,

loft,

Ind. 3rd.

'

4 ,_.., Juty.1tt, 2nd, tnd3rd,

2U pelf'1

Filth St.. Mlddll'-

. . . turntt t , chlt':q.O-'

grift ,_,. womtn cloth ing, boot
ckJ th11 ~U - 141 Mtny mort
tttmt ..., -.meroua to mtndon.

8•00 I

810 louttt lacond, Midctteport.
July 1 4 . Ltts of ft'I IIC "
..

Fnilo¥

J..,

3 8·6 Behind

lunMftlf'fW•• Atltaurent 1"
Cheletlf. tt.th• intent glrlt to
~ •.

loys slut 6·i,

Station

12

Alleywty of 672 ti lgh St ,
Mlddlaport . .Juty 1s&amp; end 2nd
Jotnn Cl.,k Contnt

dothee *t.on, Infant tell. ID'fl,
mite

mitt

••"• and wome111

.... P't Plfiiiiii'r if ....
&amp; Vicinity
·

P11t Mttrons 1t Mttonio Hell.
HtrrleonviUt Aoutt U3 Julv 1
..,d 2. 9·oo •·oo Boby bod
play ptn plut nrlaty of ltemt

...

•

• ................ .. t

Moving ttle July 2.3,4 Furnlturt, glatt. clothing, drytr.
workbench, lots of paperbtckt,
4th tnd Peerl, Rtdnt

ll'lf..,.....

Julv 1,2, 3 9 00·5 00 Kldt
clothing 1nUque ltamt, rrWtc
hemt 211 Ash St. Middleport .

BIG VAliD SALE. 110 Third 8(.

1 ftmltv 111e Juty 1. 5 i t , ·
4p m !dw11d1 r•ldence. e14141·21 11 btfor1 lp M , Nt . .
&amp;et11tmtnt , Junction Morning
8ttr tnd Pine Orove Pldt
Btlfoone on Mgf)t.

O.•ogo Solo July 1" · 2nd, ond
3rd t 00·2 00 Jult off C ~

38 Witch for 1lgn1 FlrtpiiiCI
tn11rt, bHtpraadt, Flaher llflce
toyt. clo1h". Phon• 614·143·

U&amp;O

Oer•u• &amp;tie J\lty 3

9 00·4 00
Bedroom tultt, lrterer blcydt,
bole spline• •nd mtttr..s. cur·
t1int. bedtprtedt, oil ptintmtt,
ctothet, mite Antlqut chair,
chin• ceblnll tnd picture
fram•. Dtl• Hsrt, Ytltowbulh
Ad, Aacine.

M~~

Junt 27th 1111
00.. furn ltUfl CIO•

life

th""' . . .. c1not. TV. 22 12
M1dittl&gt;n Awe

M11on, ..twnt 30, July 1· 2
clothl"•· ctrptting , ctndy
moW., fvrwhure. kn ick kntckt
curtaiftt t ..... toys, chtldt .,...,

.......
rnw..-,.

lew-. tfttdllne, tvp..,ntt.
Nee' Ita 1 ptla, Clnnlng ltrt·
t.lt more Thurtday
,...,.. , 17 PfiiHnt St

Olt- Y•~ hlo July 2,3,4
- - Jowelory. Oolllf&gt;d111 Feny, Lett ol new Items •'

t~ Am tfme, 1 mlfa dut
Atclmu4 " ' " '· ... nderton, WV
we~~. Thu,., '"· 10·00 till 8·oo
C " - lMI mite lttmt. Home

2

.... .._.

,,...,.., "'""· b..,. Clot hM, lOti

,....

to2 Thhd at,,

lit .,.,.

1o1o.

tllld mite.

._..._ n ....a, TV,

_ . . , l,a 1:00-1 Lotoof

�Page- S- The Daily Sentinel
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

51

LAFF-A-DAY

Kenmore waaher- t95 . Wtt lrl·
pool wuhet"· green, S160, GE
Washer'· Almond. like · nAW,
1176. Dryer· white. S75 . Oryereoppertone, 196. GE Gn dryer·
t150. Hoover ponabla wuherdryer let· t200. Electric rang o30 Inch. S126 . Electric rang•
30 inch, copportona, S150.
El~ric rang• 30 Inch, 895.
Electric range- whne. t65. 2
r.rrigerators- frost free-white.
S125 each. Freezer- like new,
1160. Skagga Appliencea, 559
Upptr River Rd. Call 614-446739a.

1980 14 •_70 Memory : 10120
deck wllh rtll , 4.116 badl porch.
10x1 .. outbuildinv built with
prenure truud · lumber ·

$12.600 . 1 987 KIWIIIki 1 10 4
wheeh" $1 ,100. Cell 614-246·
9629.
1981 Knox 12x6Ci, 2 BR . total

Electric, new carpet ,
C1 ll 814-448 -0176.

~o~ ery

nice.

1

For ule or tent : 1972 mobile
home, 12r.80. Good cond!lion. 2
bedrooms. Al1o 1980 Suzuki
motorcycle. C•l1614-98ti· 3931
or 814-985 -3839.

22 inch bathroom vanity with
la,itory &amp; acce11ories. like new.
Call 614-245-5136 .

1974 SchultJ, 14x66. Total
electric , gu •-w•ileble, on
60K1201ot,chainfence, 12x16
we~rk J~op wi1h gas, and one
1mtU building. 118, 000 or trflld&amp;
tor property Gf &amp;qui I v•lue . Wr ite
Virginia Rackul, 222 Beech St ..
M iddlepon . Ohio.

CARPET
Remnants -All si:res
carpet· t6.00 yard &amp;
rooms· $300 &amp; up.
available. Mollohan
Upper River Rd. Call
7444 .

Trailer for ule or rent. Call
614-992 -7179.
Mod,lor Homol Corter F"nch
residence. Middleport. Corner of
Fo,rth ond Hook" M'lt too lo
1ppreci1t1. Call614-992 -32 93.
1973 14x70, 3 bedroom. furnished. t7260. 1988 2 badroom, partly furn ish&amp;d. S6600.
614-992· 747 9 .
197&amp; Rochester 141.70 mobile
home, total elec. new c arpel.
07,900. Nog. 304-876 -7616.
1979 Holly Park mobile home.
70.114. ctn be seen lot No. 35. K
l K Mobile Home Park. 304e76·7979.
1982 14K70 Holly Perk, 3
b$1room, ce ntral air, ell electric.
Must Sell . 304· 773-9166 .

SJI:nl'11'. "'

"Of courseh I'm preparingI
myself for is retirement,
got a J'ob."

r1.::::;:::;::;::::;:~~===~1-;;=::;=======.,
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Nice furnished 2 bdr. mobile
home. Upper At . 7, UOOmonth.
W1ter j»&gt;id. Call814· 245· 681 8 .
Mobile Homes for rent. Cell
614-446-0527 .
Two bedroom, furnished mobile
home. Pa1io. located in Gallipolis. Call 614-245-11190.

Mobile home ~or 11le or rent ,
304-773-6612 .

2 BR, 121160 unfurnlahed 1/ 2
mile from Holzer. reference &amp;
'79 Manchin mobile home. depo1it required. Call 814-44814x70, new carpet, 3 bedroom, l -4 -3 6_s_or_3_04_-e_7_6_·_97_e_o_._ _
t7,200.00 or belt offer. 3044"8-1774.
14d5MobileHome.2BR,on1
"'!
acre land, 2 chikhen accepted,
M~blle home, two loll, nice S100 Oeposit, t165 / month
block goroge. total electric', plus utilities . c.u 614 ·388·
9BB1 Vinton area.
cantralair.l•rgaacreened porch. 1- - - -- - - - - - niiW underpenning. wa1her end 2 bed roam mobile home. Roush
dryer, food hatter, New Haven. lana, Chuhlre. Nice lot. Call
alt goes lor one pric•. c1ll 304 _773 _5828 _
394 · 676 - 4466 lor more !- - - - - - - -- -information.
2 bedroom mobile home tor rent.
VIne St .. Rtcine. C•ll614-3877,48 .
33
Farms for Sale
Duple,; , 1 bedroom, panty furnished. t 140 par month / '"'
8 ecres on Tribble Rd. off At. 62 . utllille•. Call 61 4 · 992-239 afPius store building. warehouse. ter 9:00 p.m.
3 SR houll!t, barn, cellar. plus 2
other buildings. All bl1ck top 2 bedroom, fumlahed, wuher
ro',ad. Call 304·458·18U . C1ll and dryer, AC, t195 plus
aftar 6PM.
depo1it and ulilltlet. 814-992 ·
7479.
2G 1cre larm Hannan Trace 1
---------Road, Glenwood. W. Va. for Two 2 bedroom mobile homes,
more Information call ;,04· 773· furniahed. y1rd wllhch•ln link
6118 or 773· 5186 •Her 5:00. fence. 875.00 deposit, phone
304-676-8612 1fttr 6:00pm.

1---.;_______

44

Apartment
for Rent

VIllage Green apu. now accept·
ing applications for residency. 2
bedroom, ·total electric. For
mora information 614-992 ·
6174 .
Fuml1hed apts. in Middlepon, 1
bedroom, t210, 2 bedroom,
1220. t100 depo•it. C•H 814992· 5160 .
APARTMENTS , mobile homea.
houtes. Pt. Plauanland Gallipolis. 614-448-8221 .
1 bedroom ground floor, private
entrance, recently remodeled.
Everything furn .. toe. outskirts
Henderson. 1280. month. 304·
675-6730.

2 bedroom furniHd apt, urland
deposit. New Haven, W. Va..
304-882-3267 or 304 · 773 ·
6024.
One bedroom apt. in Pt . Plealint. E11tt1 clean and nice.
Adulta Only. No Peta . 304-676 1388.

45

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent , day. week.
month. Gallla Hotel . Call 614446-9715 . Rent 11 low 11 S120
month.
Furniahed room . t1 16. Utilltitl
paid. Share blth. Single mala.
919 Second. Galllpolia. Call
441-4416 after 7pm .

'

3'4

Business
Buildings

Oommercl1l buildings for lease.
Downtown Pt. Ple111nt . Stores,
offlte1. A-One Rul Est1te.
CetOI Yeager. Broker. Call 304·
876· 610 • .
747 lnddustrlll nor~ge 12 loot
over head door. 3 phues of
electric, 18x'18 attel building
614 - 446 - 2362 For
appointment .
747 Industr ial stor1g1 U foot
overhead door , 3 phesn of
electric. 1&amp;..48 shtel building.
Call 614-446-2362 for appoint ment.

35

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

6 1cre1. S16,000 . Cllll 614·
992-6696.
1% ac tot onJerrys Run Rd. with
rural water . 304-678· 2383 .
45 ecru mora Of ltttl Bud
Chattin Road , city w1ter, paved
road, 826.000 .00. 304 ·7763679.

36

Real Estate
Wanted

3 to 5 acres on At. 36 with
highway frontage. Call E.R.A.
Town 6 Country Real Estate
Broker, 304-876·6648 or 6752517 aher 6.

Renlal s
41

Household Goods

Trailers near Goodye'r Plant
Hereford Line. refrances re·
quired. 304-578 -2103.

44

47

Space for Rent

Office Space tor Rent. Excellent
lor Attorneys, Account1nt, ate.
Clo1a to Court House. C1ll
Wiseman Real Estate Agency.
614 -. .8 -304• .

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apanments for
rent. B111ic rant tor 1 bdr .,
t183.00; 2bdr., U19 .QO. Also
reQuired 1 UOO.OO 11curlty
deposit. CONTACT; Jacklon
Eatatea Dept . Ph 446-3917
Equal Housing Opportunity,
Furnithed a. unfurnished apts.,
1160.00 and up, rl11fenctl Ph.
304 ·876·7738 or 304 ·876 ·
6104 A·1 Aul Estate.
Furnished Efficiency S145 . Utili·
tlat paid, share bath. 807
Second Ave., Gallipolis Ph.
448-4418 after 7PM .
Up1taira unfurniahed apanment.
Utllitiea paid. Carpated, no child·
ren or peta. Call814-448-1637
Furniahed apt. next door to
Ubrary. One profa11ional Adult
only . Perking. Ph. 446 ·0338.
Garage apt. 3 rooms &amp; bath.
Furnl1htd, Including wnhl!lr,
dryer 6 air . Clean . No p1rt1.
Adultl only . Ret. &amp; dep required.
C•ll614· -«6 ·1519.
Furnished apartment , t226 .
urilitlu paid. 1 bdr. 920 Four1h.
G1Uipolla. Call446·4416 1her
Rpm.
Furnished apartn1en1 , t226 .
Ulilitles paid. 1 bdr . 939
Second. Galllpolls. Call 4484416 af1er8pm.
Apanment for Rent: 3 rooms .
t126 / mo. Adults. Call 304·
675-5104, or 675-n38.

Houses for Rent

2 8R apanment. furnished .
large rooms &amp; yard. Ma in St.,
Nicely furn is hed small house. Cheshire. UOO month. Water
Adults o nly . Referen ces re· paid. C•II&amp;U-246-5818 .
qulred. Off street p1rking. Ph.
814· 446·0338.
1, 2. &amp; 3 BA apartmentl.
Honcrvtuckle Hills . Range. reUnturniahed house. 3 bdr. Rod· frig ., l garb191t dl1p01111. G11
ney Village II. t275 . Call 446- hut . Rents stanlng at t190.
4416 after Bpm.
Watlf. sewer, tresh s~tn~ICI paid.
C•ll 814·446-3344 or 8141 J 2 BAdroo m brick below Swan 446 · 1 134 . Equal Housing
CreM.: dan, lull basement. air Opportunity .
condition ing. fuel oil ha11. 1 cer
91rag1. U50 / mo. 2) 2 to 3 Furnished Efficiency Apartment :
Bedroom apartment in 1own, 3 rms. • blth, carpet through·
ut ilities paid S360. 3l 3 Bad· out. private • quiet. Single
room. full b11ament. Spring working person only. Call 814Valit'l area. t326 . 4) 3 to 4 440· 4607 or 61•· 440-2002 .
Bedroom on Little Kyger Ad.
Country 1ttmosphe1e. 1350. Deluxe 3 roo m unfurnished
Wlaeman Real Esta1e 614 -448- apenment. Pllew kitchen, carpet
36••·
throughout. 1st. floor, off 11ree1
p11king. Call 814·446·4107.
928 First Ave. 6 room hs. Cell 446 -2604.
614·446· 39.6
2 BR apanmant. unturniahed
3 BR . LeGr1nde 81\ld., Brick. with rafrig. &amp; stove. At: 1&amp;1
Call 614-379 -2769
Third. 1250 month plua deposit.
CoiiiH-2•5-9596 ,
HOlllt for Ran1 or Sal1: land 1-- -- -.:..:._:.:.:____
contract, good hou1e. 1chool Upsteirs, 3 8A , 1 bath, kitchen
dlat. Call 814-448-7572 . Eve' t· furniahed. no pets. Dap. a Ref.
5o00 •4&amp;-1522.
238 First . 12150/ mo. Call 814446·4926.
Khch~tn furniahed. carpatMI, 2 1- - - - - - - - - - BR . 1 lfJ b1th, no pets. Otp. &amp; 2 BR, 2 bath. carp•ed. kltchan
Rer. 233 Second Avenue. furnishtd. no peta. diiP. • r...
U60 / mo. Call614-448 ·4928. 1325 / mo. 11 Coun St. C.ll
814·446-492&amp;.
2 ~room houae and lpf. for 1-:-- - - - - - - - - rtnt In Pomeroy. Partlelly fur· Grec:ious living. 1 and
bednlthl'd. daPQalt required. Call room apartmanta 11 YHiegt
&amp;14· 992· 2381 .
M•nor and Rtv..-.kle Apertmants In Middl"'on. From
2 bedroom house In Clifton. UU . lncludln9 utllftftl. C.ll
Stove. ,.frlgerator, CIW plttd. No 81 4·992· n87. EOH.
~· · D1posit. Phone 304· nJ.
5952.
1 bedroom turnllhN ..,- . in
Middlepon. All utiMtl• pakt.
HOYM for rent in Middleport. 1210 pat month. Call814·h2·
Coli 81•·992 ·0939 .
6160 .

1- - -.:_ ______

Mobile Home Spac•IO ft . or
smaller. t76. Water Pd. 920
Fourth, Gallipolis. Cell 614·
448·4411aher RPM .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rentel trtilen. Call 814-9927.79.

Al so cut
up. living
Financing
Furn iture.
614-446·

living room suite. 1175. Floor
mod81 TV.· 165. 2 twin 1ir:a
badframes &amp; mattreues. S65 . 1
full size bed with bo ~o; springs 8t
manreu . no. Ca ll 614 ·446·
3236 .·
living room furniture for sale:
Red S. white velvet. Call 614·
_3_8_B_
-9_0_6_9_._".:.
•'_'m
--,
• ._ _ __
Almos1 new kitch&amp;n appliances :
kitchen ubte. new C .B., StAreD.
more re11onably priced. 133
State St., Gtliipolia.
Sofa, coffee table end 2 end
tables S400. Whirlpool tJOrteble
wuher end dryer 1226. Call
614-992 ·611 1.
large frost -tree refrigerator.
S125 . Electric range. 886 . Microwave oven and cart, 1125.
Antique Metropolitan Organ.
$75 . Queen Anne style wing·
back chair. 166. Cell 614-992·
669? or 614-992-3189 .

54

Misc. Merchandise

Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1.000 tirea. sizes 12, 13. 14, 16,
16, 18.5 . 8 miles out Rt . 218 .
Coli 614 -266 -6251 .

47 Wanted

to Rent

3 or 4 Bedroom house in Kyger
Creek School Dlatrict. Aeterencea Ph. 614·448-8821 .

Merch andi se
51

llousehold Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 62
Olive St .. Gallipolis.
NEW- 8 pc. wood 9roup- S399.
Living room IUitea· • 1 99-t599.
Bunk beda with beddln9· t199.
Full 1ize mettrna A foundation
starting · t99 . Recliners
starting· 199.
USED· Btdl, drnaers, bedroom
suit .. , 1199- t299 . Deaka ,
wringlf Wlll'tlf, 1 c;ompletelina
of u1&amp;d tumlture.
.
NEW- Wlltlt'n boots· t30.
Worltboots 118 • up. (Steel A
soft toe! . Call814·448·3159 .
County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appllanc" and TV aett.
Open BAM to 8PM . Mon lhru
s.t. 614-448-1499, 827 3rd.
Ave. Galllpolla. OH .

V•llev Furniture, new &amp; uaed .
Large section of quality furnl·
tun . 1218 E•attrn Ava ..
01lllpolis.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wutten. dry-.. refrigerators.
flngts . Sk•v•• Appliancta,
Upp• Rhllf Rd. beside Stont
Crest Motel. 814-448-?398.

Misc . Merchandise

Lon· Shaw porch furn iture. 5 pc,
cream color. exc cond , 304675·8562 .

1978 ~.,k Twain 140 HP. 1/ 0 ,
dual ole, tilt trailer. S4,000.
Coli 814-3a8-97a3.

55

1983 18 fl. Bay liner Boat with
86 HP Chry~er motor. Walk
through bow. t5600. 814-992·
7653 •fter 4 : 30~

Building Supplies

Buildinoa Materials
Block. brick. 1ewer pipea, windows, lintels. etc. Claude Winters, Rio Grande. ·0 . Cell 814245 ·5121 '

35 HP Mercury Outboard, controls and tteering. t396. Call
614-949· 2969. Eagle Ridge
Small Engine.

Co ncrete blocks 111 sir:es y1rd or
delivery. Meson 111nd. Gallipolis
Block Co., 123 jh Pine St ..
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614·446·
2783.

1985 Renken with cubby ctbin,
140 hp Inboard, tr•iler with
many extras, ta.OOO.OO. Call
after 6 :00 PM, 304-875·4623 .

Reedy mht concrete and all
concrete supplies. Cell us V!!llev
Brook C::ament and Supplies.
304·773-6234.

56

61
Groom and Supply Shop·Pet
G rooming All breeds . .. AII
styles. Ju lie Webb Ph. 61 4 -446·
0231 .
Oragonwynd Canery Kennel.
CFA Himalayan, Persian end
SiamBSe kittens. AKC Chow
puppia1. New kittens: Siamese
and Himalayans. Call 614 -4463844 etter 7PM .
8 month old rust short haired
miniature Dachshund. Cat1614·
446-3243.

Apricot poodle pup. AKC regis·
terad , Wormed. tailed A shots.
Sire champion line. Call 614446· 7372
Ferrets· $25 .00. · Great Dana
pups- t100. Rabbits - 13.60.
Cell614-446· 1354 .
Cocker Spaniel pups-1 100
each. Call 614-388-8890.

AKC Reg istered Minature
Schnauzer puppies. ta iles
docked , u lt and pepper color.
shots and wouiltld. 304 -8963951

Gtten glazed ceramic block ; 16
3/ 4x7 3 / 4 , approx . 500 block .
Cat1614-446-0671

Regi1tared AKC Bour puppies.
phone 304 -576-2683.

Purebred Siamese Kinens. 304675-2169 .

57

Musical
Instruments

1960 G•la.1y Ford antique car.
Price negotiable. Cannon Copier
NP200 wittt metal stand ca·
binet. 1h price. Call 614-992 ·
7866.
275 Get. fuel oil tank, &amp;125, 3YI
HP Tecumseh Horizontal engine,
new t150. Utility trailer with
spare 186 , 8olens Rider model
900. no eng. solid deek. pos.
trac. R-E 8150, Tiller N.R. &amp;26,
UJtd puah mowers, 18 Inch
B&amp;O elect 134.95. 22 inch
Penney• J 1h HP tech. t44.96,
20 Inch lawn chief 6 HP tech.,
164.95, 20 Inch Surs 31.h HP
Tech., t49 .96, 22 inch Seers
uti propelled 4 HP tech ,
t79.95 , 20 Inch Seers 3YJ HP
tech t64.96. 110V Generator
needs repair t74 .95. Electronic
Ignition for most B-S Tech.
wsedeatlft. chain nws U .96.
E1gle Ridge Small Engine• Cen1tr. 614-949· 2969 . Open 12· 8
p,m.• Mon.- Sa1.
TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS . hot
reblueing, free puppy with each
blueing job, ca ll 304· 675· 463 1.
3· pc cherry dining room Jet.
6· 24" bau kit cabinets, sofa.
Call Andy Sigler, 304· 675·
1286.
Full walnut bedroom suite full or
queen sire. 1300. 304· 676·
6866.
Ponable 40" x8 ' lighted changeable letter sian t 299. non
lighted t229. Ftn delivery "'nd
lanar~ , WVa 800-842-2434 or
Ohio ao0 -533-3453 .

Wanted to Buy

Now buying shell eorn or ear
corn. Cell for lateatquotes. Ainr
City Farm Supply, 614-448·
29a6.

63

Livestock

Duroc Boars. Brltd just like the
boars we tested at the Ohio
Testation th1t g1inltd over 2 .8
lbs . per day. Roger Bentll!l"f,
Sabina,. OH . 513· 684-2398 .
Fresh &amp; lpringing Holstein heif·
ers. AI sired &amp; DHI Records. Call
614-2a6-2.96.
3 registered Angua cows, young,
ni ce, bred . $600. each Firm.
304-676-2902 .

64

Hay

8o

Grain

Alfalfa-Timothy Hay· 1987 new
crop, \ltry high qlolallty, no rain .
Some 100 percent alfalfa. Can
deliver. Call for pricn &amp;: availa·
bility. 24 houra; Hidden Hills
Farms, 433 Jackson Pike. Galli·
polis. Ohio 46631 . Phone 61 4·
446· 6003 or 614·246·9146
after 6pm.
Straw $2 .00 bale, Morg1n
Woodlawn Farm. At. 36, Pliny,
W. Va. 304-676-1286 or stop
by .

Modello Upr ight piano. Call
614·446·0671 .
Yamaha 12 channel mixing
board. 2 PI Peavey Main t, 2 PV
monitors, PV monitor head.
2-15 inch JBL . 2 Shure mics. 1
Shure headset mic, lighting
system. 12 channel snake. 614·
992-6137.

58
&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

Quality Fruiu 11nd Vegetables
retail and wholesale. B. &amp; S.
Produce ecrou from Pizza Hut,
Gallipolis, Ohio.

Catalyllc Converters, only
t89.96 . Moat models. lnstalla·
t ion also available. Muffler Man,
9 Stimpton Ave .. Athens, Ohio
1-aoo-a43 -3767.
Baby clothing and car seat for
aala, Both e•cellent condition.
Call614· 992 ·7143 after 2:00.

Farm Equipment

For Mle· · Gravely. Phone 304676-3939 after 6:00 .

62

Farm Supp li es
&amp; Ltveslock
61

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 36 'West. Jackson, Ohio.
814 -286-6451 .
Mauav Ferguson . New Holland,
Bush Hog Sales &amp; Service. Over
40 used tractors to choose from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
equipment. LArgest selection in
S .E. Ohio.
Ut ility bldg : 27'1136' x9 ' · 13 ' x8 '
track door &amp; 3' walk door.
S4444 eroe1:ed · Iron Horse
Bldgs. 614 -332-9746.
62 HP Massey Furguson dl1t1el
tractor $2395. 7ft. NH Hay Bind
1996, NH Squire Baler-aharp
&amp;996, Vermeer Round Baler
82796. hay wagon $300. Call
61.· 286-6622.
166 Malley Ferguson tractor II
#1 2 Mauey Ferguson baler
14,950. 3 pt. hit ch mowing
maehina 1360. Hay conditioner
S160. 200 gallon spray tank
with c&amp;rt 1296. Cell 61• ·286·

6622.

lnternatlonel Cub Low-Boy triC·
tor whh mower &amp; grader blade a
lawn cart 1. ?&amp;Q. Ford tractor
with high &amp; low range. New
finished .mower *2.350. Call
61.· 286-6622.
Buy one any si1echains.w chain
and get second chlin half price.
SIDERS EQUIPMENT CO ..
Henderson, W . Vt, 304· 876·
7421 .

Tran spo rl a1ion
71

1984 Chevy Chevatte : 4 dr., no
ru st , sharp. $2996. 1981 Olda
Cutl111 : 2 dr .• shtrp. U996.
Call 614·2B6·6622 .
1984 Dodge Omni, 4 spd .. like
new. S2699. John's Auto Sales.
Bulaville Rd. Gallipolis.
New rear window louvers for 82
Ford EXP . New price 1160.
Asking e100. Call 614-246·
92!§6 after 8pm.
1974lTD, Bisek . Powlt'. t200.
Coli 614-367-0446.
1983 Muatang tlltchbact. PS.
PB . AC . sunroof. cruise. new
tires, low miles. Call e14-446·
2030.
1976 Dodge Aspen station
wagon·S600 . 1977 Dodge
Aspen 1t1tlon wagon- UOO. Call
614·388-9724.
1984 Volklwagon rabbit. dinel.
71 .000 miles, uking S32QO.
Call after 6, 614· 448-4724 .
1972 Monte Carlo, 350 4 bolt
main engine, 4 bbl .. euto.• runs
good. Good cond . Asking
11000. Ctll 614-246· 9256 af·
tar Spm.

3 bedroom houN. baMmtnt.
nicavard. Clll304-676·3030 Ot'
070·30'3 1.

42

Mobile Home•
for Rent

21A. AC, ....,._ Hud oteoptod,
fllwt:o: ... 1ft .......... FOtttrl
MoMe HOIN Pltk. Pit 8 14·
-1102.

I

...-n·

July 1st, 2nd and 3rd. At. 1Z41n
SyracuN bealde Pine Dan's.
Tupperware. lntant' a. women'a
and m_, '• clothing, motDIGfCie
hiiiMI, .nd ttbl•. Fonl Trvak.
lrunlt, lawn ctlliu end lots more.

1976 Nova,. Strong engine and
trantmission. new brakes. AC.
good condition. 8500. Call
614·985-4377 evenings.

Duel exhaust kite:. $99.96 installed . Moat Fordt. Chevy
Trucks, Vans. 4x4's, Muffler
Man, 9 Stimp1on Ave .. Athans,
Ohio 1-800-843· 3767.

1972 Dodge Charger. 318,
auto, options, original paint,
high mileage, very clean and
nice. 614·742·2979 or 614·
742-2143.

4 -14 inch stotted aluminum
mags, uni- lug. 9 inch and 6 Inch
with new Remington tires. E.C.
814-7•2- 2979.

1986 PontiecSunblrdTurbo GT.
Auto, AC, AM. fM caaette, sun
root. Call 614-992-2603.
1974 Cadillac De Ville. 81000.
Coli 614-992-6864.
1981 Pontiac Firabird. PS. PO,
PW, AC . Good condition. Priced
to sell. Call 614-992-8359. See
at 22&amp; Broadway, Middleport.
1974 Ford Club Cab pick·up
with bed linlf, 1976 Camaro
360 va. Reuonable often
accepted. 614· 992·2717.
1983 Chevy 6 cyl. auto. ec. ps,
pb, very nice car, 12.996.
304·676-2663.
1972 Mercury Montego, 4 door,
good running cond, phone 304·
676-3141
'80 Camuo, 360, T·top , many
extrll, 304·675·6392 .
1 97B VW Rabbit. 304·458·
1541.

'83 Old1Cutlass .4.900.00. ' 81
Plymouth Sapporo •1.700 .00.
' 80 Dodge Diplomat
S 1, 600 . 00 . 'BO Camero
$2,500.00 . Phone · 304-8823.21.
1980 Ford Fiesta . runundlookt
good, &amp;1,200 .00 . 304·675·
1663.

72

Trucks for Sale

1977 Chev. pickup, 3 / 4 ton.
standard. four speed, heavy
duty. 350 engine. John's Auto
Setea, 614·446-4782 .
1980 Chevrolet truck . 4WD , JA
ton. Call 614·446-4225 after
6pm.
1986 Ford Ranglf. e8800. Call
614-388·9086. Pottibleoldcar
trade.
1979 Ford Truck 1 / 2 ton. Call
after 7 :00 614-446-3243 .
1977 Chl\ly P/ U truck; runs
good, nice body. t1 ,29!i. Call
614-288-6522.
1975 Chevrolet pick-up. tuna
good. t600.; 1977 Ford nation
wagon, good cond. t99&amp;. 304·
676· 28.8 .
1974 El Camino truck, good
cond. 304· 882· 2208.
1978 Chevy pickup truck. 8 Cvl.
auto, new paint job, runs good.
t560.00. 304·•&amp;8 -1732 .

~7~3~~~=::::~::;~;:=:
Vans &amp; 4 W . O .

1986 Camero, tow miiHga
18600. Call 81• ·«1-7810

1976 Chevy Vtn: new tifea.
motor rabuUt. runa very good.
t1, 100. Coli 81•· 388· 9783.

1976 Doctve. 8 cyl.. atandard
trans.. good conditkm. t400.
Coli 61•· 2~1 · 1278 .
1978 Ford ThundtrbWd Dltmond JubiiH edition . New vJnyl
top. new duel exhtult. 20,000
mil•. 12800. Call 814· 256·
670.
ChiiV•tte: 011nge. tan, widt 80
tires on gold wh ..... sunroof. air
adjustebte suspension, ICOOp,
h'e.ciMght covers, side ttrip•.
outo.. fog • drlvlnt llg"''· 30
MPG. vrHt cond. • no rust. Call
fOJ into. 814-448-3371!1.

1979 Ford Van. Econoline160.
8 cyl .. PS, auto, 81900. 614·
992·1137.
19731!1uburben 4x4, 350 auto.,
new paint, new tlr•. 12200.
(wh:hout tiru, t17150.t Call
614-. .a -3039.
1981 Je111 J10 pickup. 4wheel
dirve. low mil-. n.w transmi•·
lion. I ..,,, 304-8a2-2682.

74

Motorcycles

1981 Btjlh inotOJ scooter.
need• mechanical work. noo.
Call 814· 448·4141
6 Of
weekends.

•tt•

1110 Harl., O.VIUon for ..laor
trodo. 300·175·1143.
1973 YarnaheEndouro 1715 , call
304-571·2·76 .. 871· 2342.
1814 Kew-1 KUIIOO, 1,800
actual milu . llka new ,
t1,200.00. 304-112-2780.
1914 Hondo 110 Night Howk,
4,000 mlles , lllta new ,
t1.100.00. 304-112-2110.

II

1911 Chovy Mollbu. Good
lhip&amp; oneownM", cloth interior,
U.310. Colll14-211-el22.

New waod I pc. IN4fto room
living
ovltw. UII .H : room IUit• fnNn •111.11 to
t700.: Ch•t of . . . _, 4
- · ••• .. I do-. tSI.H :
Endt..... tromt8 • .11Ht.
UHd Fumtture: lhidtwcn tuft-.

.......

hiM
1110&lt;1~~- ·. .
twin ond
rod&lt;...
fn&gt;m tii.H
'lliE WOIIIIINO
MAN 'S FRIEND

1H8Dunol--oi-

-.111-enJ.

MO - · Auno
114-37S-2573
bo'o.

76

lt711

· C.H

c.-. 11U ....... 4

W1l. Or.. _..,...-· IHt
Fl&lt;ollkd Coli 111-1471. 241-10t7.

" I waan 't accepted beca..e of the
$1,000,000 gym my lather donated ... lt was
because of the $3,000,000 library."

·------'-------'----'----~

1171 Hondo Howk 400 """"'·
oycle tiOO.OO.
lt. "'owlw
camping
treller20•3.100.
00.

Boetland
Motors for Sale

·-----·
-----·
trwll. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
wtth ....... _ ............
...... ltk•;
. . . . .......
Ohio. 1·-143-:1717.

18112411.

p--

70 HP E
- motOf.
·
.._ht
.... Sot
II 0111- clulo. eoN 114--.·4 712 .

IT!II-EELER. 31 lt. -

- · -· Col ., .......

TUES.• JUNE 30 •

8:051Il Gtlltgen'o tollnd
6:30 D (1) iiJJ NBC Nlghlty Newo
(!) Tom Mann Outdoora (Ri
(!) II (JJ ABC Newt !:;1

(I) Nlgl1tly Buli1111e Roport
tml Gl \IJ C8S Newt
l!lJ Coloraounda
IOl ShowBiz Today News of
the entertalnmem world is
anchored live from New
York . (0:301
® Jofflraono
6:351IJ Leave It to Bllaver
7:00 (1) Hlldcletle and
McConnlck
D W PM Mlgozlne
(!) SportaC.nllr (L)
(l) Enllrlltnment Tonight
II (JJ People'• Court

,
•·

exPLAIN THE: )UCC!:'SJ"
Of PEOPLI: WE

DON'i

L.l~f.

Cl''"'"'...u._ ...

·ALLEY OOP
D.\NG! HE'S GOT ME! I'LL NEVER GET
AROUt.ID FAST ENOUGH TO PROTECT
. MYSELF!

Services

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair, peru. and supplin . Pick
up and d•llvery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner . one h•lf mile up
Georges Creak Rd. Call 614·
446-0294.

MYLA~

ME SIDU.Y. ..

10 W AU.JT

MPRIHA

Exterior Stucco. Pluttr and
Pl•star Repair. Work by the hour
or by the job. Free estimate. Call
614·268· 11a2.

Feuy Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-676-1331 .
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Moat well• compl.ted 18me day.
Pump sales and aervice. 304·
S96-3802

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I HOPE D-\A15 A
CDG-, 6ECAU6E IF

Starks Tree and Lawn Service.
lawn care. landscaping. stump
removal . 304 ·6 76 · 2842 or
676· 2903 .

THEN THE
MARTIANS fJA\t
LANDED.

IT IS N'T A DOG: ...

Dl"fWIII and ~tpair . 20 years
experience. Free Estimate. 304676· 32a7 .

tmt Wheel of Fortuna r:;J
IOl Croealtre (0:30)
tiiiOl IIJ) Jeoperd'l r:;J
® Molor LHgue BIIHbllll
7:351Il Honaymoo111ra
8:00 W Dakta~
D W iiJJ Meflock Madonna
like rock star accused of
murdering her manager hires
Ben. (A)
(!) Karate (T)
(l) II (JJ Who'o the Bo..?
Tony wrestles with his
conscience on reunt1tng
Angela and Geoffrey.(Al r:;J
(I) Nove Explore the efforts
of scientists to grow fOOd
underwater. r:;J
Ill GIIOl The Wlzerd All
eyes are on Simon when his
old pal meets with disaster.
(R)

of 1oday'o news and a took
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)
10:30 (1) Clltbrlty Chtlo
IIl Mojor L.Hgue IIIHblll
l!lJ M_,...okera
®Newt
.ill USA Tonight
11:00 (1) Hordclatle ond

BARNEY '

McCormick

IH' FLATLAND iOURISTERS
HF\VE ARRIVED IN H
HOLLER PF\RSON

Electrical
Refrigeration

~~OC ~urrent

Ego Ex~rtence
.illi.MI.._
1t:41.(1) IIJ) lilt of c.....
12:00 (1) llurM lllld Alltn
!Il .,..,._ (R)

Watterson ' s Wstar Hauling,
r•soneble fltel, lmmadiete
2.000 gallon deUvary. elttltna,
pools. well. ate. call 304· 578·
21!8.

a

(I)BignOII
I[]) Wor. A Commenlll}' by

Tonlgl1t Action
packed oports highlight&amp; with
NIGk CheMaa and Jim HuDar.
(0:30)
.IOl 'T.J, Hooker' CIS 1.111
Night Hooker Ia atrlppad of
his badge and gun. (Ri
® Trapper John MD The

J A J Water Servict. Swimming
pools. ciaternt, wells. Ph. 814·
2·6-8285.

A
M Custom Couch• end
AtuphcM1ery. lt. At. 7 , Crown
City. Oh. II•·:ZU-1•1o. Evo.
114·441· 3431 . Op1n daily 1 to
4o30, Sot. l o30 lo 1:30. Old •
ntw Ul)ho11•ed.

YEsTEIDAT'S SCIAa:iits "ANSWEIS .
Mikado - Hound - Kneel - EDI/ofl - GOOD for ME
In my house all our meals were heafthy. Mom always told
me I'd better eal everything on my plate If I knew what was
GOOD for

ME:.._.- - - - - - - - -

BRIDGE
NORTH
+A107S

1-lt-n

.,•,

.K 8 7 8
8 A K 52

+K

EAST

WEST
•
Strange things happen in the rar· +Q4
8J62
efled atmosphere of tournament 9J2
9 A 10
..
bridge. West led the jack of htlllrts • Q 10 9 7 3
tJ81
against the slam. Now any sensible +7813
+Qt812
person sitting East would assume that
SOUTH
partner had nothing more than the
'·
+US!
l·
heart jack. He would take the position
.Q1851
that any further trick coming to the
86
defense would be late in the hand. He
+A
J 10
would also consider it a bad Idea to
Vulnerable:
North-South
' '
duck this first trick, since he might not
Dealer:
North
like being on lead later. Then another
thought crossed the mind of poor East.
Eao1
What it West were making a deceptive ' Weat
Pau
lead with, say, the Q-J doubleton ol' Pa,.
Pa11
hearts? Shouldn't that be more likely \ Paoa
Pus
' than the jack from a singleton or a Pau
'~.
Pus
doubleton - a lead abhorred by many PaP
Pa11
experts? So the beat went on.
j PaP
. ,,
· Eventually East ' played low. De·
clarer won the queen, played A·K of 1
Opening lead: • J
diamonds, on which be threw a sr,ade,
,
and ruffed a diamond. He next p ayed L--_:.--.------"'k,'
to the club king and played another dl· hands, and so m·ade the olam.
amond. East diBcarded a club as South
•
ruffed. Now South cashed the ace of A new book by James Jacoby and his
clubs ruffed a club and played a lather, the Isle Oswlld Jacoby, Lo 110'6 •
trump. East had to win the heart ace. IVIillb/e 11 bookstores. II II "Jacohj/;
When he played a spade, declarer took on Card G1mM," published by Pharo~-.
the percentage view that the opade Books.
·'•
h
ere split in the defenders'
rmnPAPI!III:Iti'DPRIIUIIN. · ·' '

$•••.

.'
'

..,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
41 Brazilian
ACROSS
tapir
1 Londoner's
42 Refute
"bye"
43Coup d'II Vagrant's
DOWN
row
I Czech mts.
9 Pallid
2-flu
10 Do one's
stuff
3 It's now!
II Row of seat.'J 4 Scottish
12 Beef on
seaport
the hoof
II Ladd film
Yetterday'• ADiwer
14 Hooray!
8 VIolin
II Marsh
7 Thereat
18 Not her
8 Show
21 Actor 28 Paddle
17 Black
result.'J
Steiger 30 Taking no
cuckoo
10 Operatic 22 Proverb
chances
(var.)
segment 23 IncoJTect 32 Artery
18 United
13 Tread
24 Was
33- Lakes
19 Tlmoreae
the boards
of use
38 Sty
Ill London
27 Irish
89 "Norma ·
coin
county
"
20 Compulsion ,...,·..
ao_u,;p,..".....,....
22 Editor's
direction
23 Card

.·

,,' 1"' '

. .,

1:,eA~l

"'

. '·
I

iiJ HeWINight Uvt I1IWI
with Petrick Emory and
Klratan Lindquist. (I :00)

PEANUTS

' ...--------, ....--------.
YOU'RE AT TloltS Bl6

SUWEN"'(. ACROSS TllAT

PAm, SEE .. YOU'RE IN

CWWDED ROOM, VOU
SEE Tlo!E 61RL OF VOUR
DREAMS!SUDPENL'(. VOU

"OOM

~tS CROWDS'"

..

KNOW I'OO'RE I~ LOVE!

12:30 (1) lilt of Qroucl1o
(I)IchOflolc lpor1l

-'-!Ri
(I)
•

Ytluet.ille•i..II..IDDII.,
(JJ lien RMI People

MoCkMICI (NR)
MOVII: •..._ R'•
I aIICMI:

~ cu I.MI Movll

a
"MOw. Zono
• ill ...

(1 :40)

.• 12:41e&lt;Jl a ..... Night w1111
Dl.tdiMIIWmMl

.~"i

••

-•''
·~

••II

... '

'' ·

....... -.

...................

game

''

211 English
river
28Greedy
27 Crol!l8word
direction
29 Spanish
article
30Grassy
ground

••
'·

'

.

' '

31 Droop

'

34 - transit
gloria

·"

...-,

" ~··

311Go wrong
38 Craggy hill
37 Maniage-

mlnded
39 Infrequent
40Corundum
DAILy CRYPI'OQUOTES- Heft's bow IG work It:

.' ,,"

AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW

''•".

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is uied
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoetropbel. the length and fonnati&lt;ll of the words are all
blnll. Each day the code letters are different.
CIYPI'OQUOTE

''

s z~

P B U A N

·V T G A N S K

\

QXBJSTSPSTXB
· J D N T V ·K

SZA
UP A

TJ

BA Q AJ

JPGCAQS

NAJSNOTBSJ

'

·'

s

~

X

~

'

I

.

'.

•.· t..

.......

·

Yatentay't Cryptoqaote: TRUE COURAGE IS NOT
ONLY A BALLOON FOR RISING BUT ALSO A PARA·
r.~nl'l'F. FOR FAU.ING.- L. BORNE

.
.

ONXQAJJ . - SZXWDJ

C AL LANJ XB

.

"

People

l[])llgnon

•

'

'

II]) 8por1l

A • R W•ter Service. Home
claterns. wells. poota filled.
Formerly Jamn Soya Water.
Coli 30•· 875-8370.

Up.holstery

ac

tm1 Mlgntll11, P.l.

Dillard WMer Service: Pools,
Cistet"na, Walls. D1iivery Anytime. Cell 1114-446-7404-No
Sunday calli .

87

IIJ) ,...,.

(!) SpoNCenter (L)
(l) WKAP In ClnclnneU
• (JJ Nlghtllne r:;J

General Hauling

11;;:=~~~====
.

• ClJ !Il 11 (JJ tmt

reports or world economtca
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
•ill Love eon.-tton
11 :30.(]) i1JJ Wimbledon '17
Updltl

Resident ial or commercii! wiring . New sarvice ar rep1in.
Ucen11d electrician . E111mate
free, Ridenour Electrical. 30.676· 17a6.
,

Form•ty Ken'a now John's
Wetlf llfYice. John W.tt.-.on.
Jr. Owner. 1.000 Of 2,000 a•
-.ioo. 304 ·570· 22•1 .

(I) South Amarlcon Joumoy
Examine factors leading to
potlttcat ferment In Bolivia
and Chile.
tmt G1 11J MOVIE: 'So Ftnt'
cas Tueodlt_Movie
l!ll Frontl1111 Q
IOl Llrry King Ltvol In depth
tntervtewa with top
newsmaker6 and celebrities.
10:00 (l) D (JJ Splnter: For Hire
Four 1hugs In garish goalie
masks terrorize S(!nsar's
netghbOI'IlOOd.(R) 1;1
(I) Wor. A Commenlll}' by
Qwyn111 Dyer This episode
chrortctes the making of
soldiers from green recruits .
II]) Evening Newo A wrap up

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolia. Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 or 814446-4077

85

the day's world news and In
depth feature reports . (1 :00)
Ill ill Me)or LHgue
IIIHblll
8:051Il MOVIE: Houoebool (NAt
(I !50)
8:30 (l) 8 (JJ Growing Petno
Ja&amp;on uses his skills lo
enact a truce bltwHn
Maggie's parents. (RI r:;J
9:00 (1) 700 Club
D (]) Ol MOVIE: 'C.A.T.
Squed' Tutldlly Night ttlhe ·
Movlfl
(I) Top Rink Boxing
(l) II (JJ MoonllghUng David
and Maddie help an old man
search for his estranged son.

8Newa

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

..

~.

(R) 1;1

RON'S Televiaion Service .
Hou1e calls on RCA. Quaur.
GE. Specialing in Zantth. C.ll
304-676· 2398 or 614-446 2.64.

UNSCRAMILE

By Jamea Jacoby

l!ll Nova

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gueran·
tee. local raflfences furnished.
Free •limetes. Cell collect
1·614· 237·0488. day or night.
Rogars8asement
Wl!terproofing.

•

is.naon

II]) Prlmenawe Wrap ups of

Home
Improvements .

. IN

Outsmarting
oneself

(!) Flohlng BiH Dance
IJ(JJ Judge

IN L...UC:fC - - HOW ~L$1: CAN WE"=

lEITERS I' I' ~ r I' • .,
8 PRINTTHESENUioiS!RED
SQUARES
• • •1
_ • 1
• 1
• 1
•
l!TT!RS TO I
GET ANSWER
• II IIIII

(I) 101 MecNtll/ Lehrer
NewaHollf (1 :00)
tmt Newe
.IDl Mo111yt1111 Currant
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
GIIOl IIJ) Wheel ot Fortuna

Ill ill Todoy In Weal Vl'lllnla
7:051Il Sonlorll end Son
7:30 D W !Il Ntwtywld Gome

'71 Ford pick up with topper.
304-882·3237 aftlf 6 o'clock.

&amp;

S TYI P

®Goodnm..

19 ft . Nomad camper for 11le or
trade. Nice and clean . 304-6764437 .

84

V I RQUE

•ill Bllttleotar GeleC11ce

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

82

KJO"lbled words be-

(I) Dr. Wllo Tators of Wang
Chiang
l!ll Secret City

1969 14 ft. telf-contalned Beeline Camper. Excellent for beginning campers or hunters. t450.
614-949-2333 evenings .

81

four

low to form tour simple words.

D W !Il II til 9l • \IJ

Auto R apair

1983 Calevier, 4 door. standard
trent, air cond, 6 ,300mllll, Yef'l
good cond, U ,SOO.OO. 304675·6730.

I. POllAN

OReorronge ""'" of tht

IIJ) Newt
(!) SporteLook (T)

Struta. $119 .96 peir, instelled.
Moat mod~s . Muffler Man. 9
Stimpson Ave., Athena. Ohio
1-a00-643-3767 .

79

.,.....:.;:..::...,...._,; :._,;;; l~lto4 ~,

..

8:00 (1) Big Volley

Wanted to buy 1977 to 1979
Chevy lmpel11 or Caprice for
parts, 304-895-3568.

77

'::~:r:~' S(C\\~lA-~t.trs·
:::
CLAY

EVENING

BUDGETTransmiii!Ons: Used&amp; '.
Rebuilt. All typn. Guaranteed a..
minumum of 30 dayt, will • ..
deliver, cash &amp; carry or instil.
Ph. 614-379 -2220 or 1·304- •,
675-6758.
'
. ..
Uud &amp; rebuilt tranami11ion1. All
internally inspected &amp; guaranteed. lnatellllitkm &amp; pickup available. Call 814·446-0968 .

1978 Honda 380T. low miloogo. t210. Coli &amp;1• -886·
. . 18.
~:..::..------ - lc1115 Y· ll Ma9f!a. 8,000 mil•.
Good IHI01d . 51·· . .1· 0315.

CMh Wt\h
approved ettdlt. 3 MM11 out
luiiiWIMe Rd. Op.., t1m to 15pm
Mon. 1hru Sat. Ph, 814·448·
0322 .

•

Auto Parts
Accessories

1979 ChiW. Caprice Cl111sic.
Fulty equipped, 66,000 actual
milea, locally owned. 12&amp;00.
614·949-2674.

1988 Ymtahl VZ-260. Excel·
lant condttion. Call 814-4469710.

PARSON 'S FURNITURE
1 bedroom lolnfumlehed
ment In Middleport:. t110. F*'
month plus ulilitl11. Cell 114909-66•6 0&lt;014·8·8-2211 .

Autos .f or Sale

1918 Muuang convertible.
1955 DoSooo. Coli 614-40&amp;a5111.
.

z

4 bf house lor rant. 304·175·
2130.

71

Autos for Sale

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

10 Davs Mmt

II!

Television
Vleewt·ng

t:'

Pets for Sale

Gta\lely rid ing tractor 16 HP.
tiltar &amp; moving deck-8600. 26
ft . Wes1 inghouse chest freezer ·
1300. Call 614· 256· 1431 ,

Riding lawn mower $160, run s
good., A ir conditioner $40.
works good . Call 614 · 446 6728 .

76

~ 1$11 D' NEA I""

Regiatared AKC English Coon
hound pups. $35.00. 304 ·6755941 .

Mlco-Finder machine, pastel
meter machine, store a - ref - ~ilin g
system. Cost 1640 ea. Asking
8160 . Table &amp; desk to use in
store or shop. Call 614-2561626.

.,,

,

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Sears 1S.1 cu chest freezer
$1&amp;0.00. 304 -676-6646 ltter
6o00.

19 Inch black 8t whita TV, 850.
Mens 3 spd. bike. 140. Call
614· 4•6-4141 after 6 .

6 year old Combustioneer self
feeding coal atove for sale.
hcellent condition. For more
~n4oa~•tion . . call 614 -388·

75

21 ft. Skillcraft C•bin Cruiser.
Sleeps 4 to 6. 120 HP M•rcury
1 ~ 0 motor. Nuda ref\lrbilhing &amp;
repalfl1;ing. Will aell Of trade for
livestock. Asking 11 BOO. Call
61•· &lt;W6·7026.

Pure bred Siamese kittens for
sale. Call614 -949·2290.

2 wood stoves: 1-KindiBWood .
1-Warm Morning., New gas
camper cook stove: oven, 4
burners with cebinet . Call 614·
266-6.13 .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®b, L.rr, Wright

Oishw11her, chltlt drawers, exercill tredmiH. chain uw, lawn.
mower. air co mpreuor. 304675-5689

Plutic cittern &amp;tate approved.
plutic septic lanka, plastic
culverts. metal cutverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jaek·
son, Oh. 614 -286-6930.

Space for smell tra ilert. All
hook·upa . Cable. Also efficiency
room1 , air and cable. Meaon, , 2 Woodburnen . Cell 614· 388·
930a .
W.Va. Call304-773·ti661 .
Space for rent. trailer spacea,
locust Rd. Rt. 1, Point Pleaaant
304-676-1076.

54

T~BORN
. ~~"!X~·~J~~;;~~·!1!98~1~----~------------~------~~
· ~~m¥~~M~~~~~pm;t·~O~h~io~~;---~r---~=====.:~*;,:;n.~~Da~~~S~~;oo;·M~~~p~~~e~9~
LOSER
J
.
' '

Tuesday, June 30, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'

...'" •..

�Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

Teache~s'

Tuesday. June 30, .1sa·,

Pomeroy-Middleport, ·Ohio

.

cdnvention opens in Los A_ngeles · ·scientists tracking

By SUSAN SEAGER
LOS ANGELES (UPI)- Del egati'S representi ng 1.9 million of
the nat ion's teac hers wlll vote
thi s wt&gt;ck on such thorny Issues
a' whet her to offer AIDS ed ucat ion In thf' class room and how to
dea l with an ex pec ted teacher
shortage•.
About 7,500 delegates of the
Na tion al Ecluc&lt;~tio n Associa ti on,
thr nation 's larges t teachers
union, urP in l.o' Angeles for thr
NEA's l ~:i th an nual co nvention
that begins today.
l n a SJ.ll'&lt;'ch Monday to a
prc•-r·om·c·nt ion sPmlnar, formPr
Sc•c'l'f'l&lt;lf'Y of Sta tP Edm und Mu sk!&lt;· citr&lt;l a nerd to attract morr
co llrg&lt;· student s to the teac hing o
proft·ssion an d ca llrd for a new

program of teder al loans and
sc holar ship s for would -b e
teachers.
" Today , as you know . teaching
Is not the profess ional goal of
many co llege student s, particular ly those w ho are the highes t
ac hievers," Muskle told the
semi nar.
" l believe that to attract
excellent new teachers, the federal governm ent should develop
a generous program of loans and
sc holar ships to coll ege student s
who co mmit to teach for a
number of years ."
Muski e ca lled for higher salaries, small er class sizes and more
autonomy for teachers in hi s
speec h at a one-day seminar,
" Th e Mission of DC' mocrat ic

Schooling: The Commit m ent .
Crisis and Challenge."
Muskie cr iticized federa l, local
and state governments for not
pumping m ore dollars into public
sc hools despite recent national
opinion polls showing an in creased willingness on the part of
the tax payers to pay more for
edu cational progra ms.
Teachers were to debate and
vote on r es olutions on a var iety of
issues, including AIDS education .
in the cla ssroom , the need for
sea t belt s in school buses. m andatory drug testing of both
teachers and students, and other
controversia l topics.
The policy resolu tions will also
dea l with ca mpus child care for
teenage mothers, bilingu al edu -

cat ion and predict ions of a
massive teacher shortage.
Voting on those Issues and
other substantive business was
scheduled to begin Th11rsday .
BOSTON (UPI) Three
Union president Mary Hat- young whales pulled off a Cape
wood Futrell, who is seeking an Cod beach have been fitted with
unprecedented third term, said · tracking devices and returned to
one of the topics on which shewlll the ocean in an unprecedented
concentrate in her -keynote rescue by scien.tists who want to
speech Thursday is the prospect learn more about the mysteriou s
of a shortage of teachers. She mammal.
es timat es up to 1.5 million new
"We consider it an adventure
teachl!ts will be needed by the - a quest for knowledge about
mid -1990s.
.
returning animals to their natu " A lot of people say there is no ral homes," said Sharon Dean.
ev idence of a teacher shortage, the conservation director of the
but we will begin to see it In the New England Aquarium.
The male pilot whal es next five or 10 years . .We are
facing a major crisis in the named Notch, Tag and Baby profess ion, " she said. '
were fitted with radio and
sa tellite devices and released
Monday into a pod of pilot ,
humpback and finback whales
115 miles sou theast of Boston.
The mammals snorted through
against th e publi c and r epor- of Lake Shasta.
their blowholes and flipped their
trrs," K elner said.
Nobody except the -pilot, Mi - tails above the water .
Keln er said an agreement was chael Remer, was aboard the
" The (three) whales appear to
r eac hed severa l months ago but $350,000 boat when it stalled.
be in good condition," said
the se't tlem r nt beca me fin al Touri sts in another vessel threw
Sandra Goldfarb, an aquari um
Monday.
Rem er a tow llne, .but the vessel
spokeswoman. "They are swimTh e l awyer for the wrestler,
bega n taking on· water and sank,
ming and staying together. It' s a
Mel vin Katz. could not be offici als said Monday. Remer
very positive sign."
reached for co mment.
escaped without injury.
They were rescued from a
Shasta Belle goes to the hotRem er had taken the recently
stranding
of 60 whal es on Cape
tom : RF.DDJNG, Ca lif. ( UPI l r epaired vesse l out for .a test run
Cod
in
December
and nursed to
Salvage workers will try to Sunday aft ernoon but ·it lost
health at the aquarium. At least
rC'covC'r the popu Jar excursio n power, sheriff's deputies said.
38 other whales died in the
vessrl Shasta Belle, which sa nk The ow nC'rs said they would try to
beaching.
in 139 feet of water during a tes t salvage the vessel.
While healthy whales have
r un in t hC' Sacramen to River arm
been capt ured, held and released
before. the return of the three
whales marks the first time
beached whal es have been
rescued, nursed back to health
and returned to the ocea n, sa id
Crui se's new wife, actrrss Mimi Rogers, and his pal. Paul
John Prescott , Pxecutive direcNPwman, greeted CruisC' aft er the race. Newman also was on
tor of the aquarium.
the road , finishing seventh in the GTO competition of the
Scientists hope the trio sur Kuppenhelmer-Came l GTO-GTU Cha'llenge.
vives
and teaches them more
TALKING ABOUT THE INTERVIEWER: Angela Lanshury
says she didn't like the trPatment shC' received in a Barbara
Walters int erview . Lansbury had said she did not want to
di scuss ce rtain aspects of her family life - such as· her
· By United Press International
children' s drug use - but Walters managed to steer. the
Sen. Albert Gore Jr., D-Tenn.,
co nversation int o the forbidd en territory, leaving Lansbury to
on what he would do if he
choke back tears and unabl e to co ntinue.
becomes president : ·
" I said at th at momr nt , 'Turn the tape off.'" Lansbury told TV'
"Any government official who
Guid&lt;'. "and they sa id, ·w e can't. ' They wou ldn ' t do it." Shew as
stea
ls from the Ameri ca n people
rsprcia lly upset that the Walt er s cr ew did not edit out that
or ijes to the Unit ed Stat es
scgm C'nt.
·
Congress will be fired imme" It was shatt ering for me and for my family," she said.
diately . I seek thi s office to
Walt er s responded by say in g, " I think that Angela Lansbury's
restore the rule of law and
fC'clings wer e abso lutely valid . And if I sa w her now I'd ptil my
respect for common sense to the
arms arou nd her and say,· I'm sorry the interview pained yoli ."'
Whit e House."
Other celebrities sa id they found Walt er s warm and
rxlremely profess ional. "She's less int erested in sensaiiona lOn Aug. 19, 1%1, 3- foot -7 Eddie
ism." says Patrick Duffy of "Dallas."
Gaede I was sent to the plate as a
GLIMPSES: Th rre's another Vietnam movie co ming pinch hitter for the St. Louis
" Bat -21." starring Gene Hackman and Danny Glover and 'being
Browns in a game again sl the
shol in Malaysia. "Ba t -21" is military talk for a pilot, in this
Detroit
Tigers. He wore the
cas!' Hackm an. shot down behind enemy lin es ... Madonna's
number U, on his uniform. and
U.S. tour got off to a wet star t during the weekend in Miami's
walked on four pitches.
Orange Bow l - therC' was a two-hour rain dC'Iay.

seafaring patients

-Quirks in the news--------,..
B,y United Pr•!~s International
J.aw _yt'r hopes settlement
l'alrn' wrPst h•rs : NE W YORK
tlJI' I 1- A $4~5.000 settlement
pai d by" wres tl er who allegedly
rough&lt; •d up a t!'lev lsion repor ter ·
Filmin ~ an Pxposr on wres tling
ma y " dr&gt;tc·r such violent act s
against llie publ ic and reportc•rs," iJ lawyc1 sa id .
.) ohn Slossrl, 10, u co nsumN
r!' porll' r lor thr ABC-TV nc'WS·
maga zin&lt;' show "2020" st Ill
suffrr:s " p&lt;lin in thr&gt; r&gt;ars wh en he
h!'ars high ·pitc hPd or loud
sou nds," his law yC'r, Robert

Keln er, said Monday.
Stossel wa s allegedl y "s truck
with an open hand" on both ears
by wres tler Da v id Schult s Dec .
28, 1984, during a story on
wres t ling, th e attorney said.
Th e r epor ter sur d Schult s and
Titan Sports, Inc., whi ch sponsored shows on whi ch the
wres tler appea red , after the
alleged attack .
Kelner sa id Stossel won a
$425, 000 settlement Monda y.
" I expec t that a case such as
this will deter such v iolent ac ts

,_People in the news-------------.
By WILLIAM C. TRO'M'
United Press International
Clto li i'IE OUOPOU'I': The goldC'n agC'Of grouple-dom is long .
g•m&lt;' bt·c·ausc· of A IDS, sec urity threa ts and evil women, says
l'am cla llt•s 8arrt!s, once the queen of the groupie set.
llC's lla r rrs writ es abo ut her romances with royal rockers like
Mitk .Jaggt•r·, Keith Moon of the Who, Waylon Jennings and
.Jimmy Page and actor Don .Johnson.
•
"No't only do we ha ve AIDS and her pes. you ca n' t ge t near
t hC'sr guys anymore." she says. "Securit y has gott en much
tight rr sinc·e thr deat h of John LPnnon."
.lust aboul the t lm C' Des Barres was getting burned out on thr
scrn&lt;'. along ramr sin ger Michael Des Barres, who she
&lt;'VPn tu ,dl y married . " In the heyday . there was a lot of
t';lmarad;•ri&lt;' among groupies," she says, "but In the '70s there
wrrt· ,umr prrtt y hideous little girls coming on. Th ey ca lled me
an old bag whPn I wa s 2:!."
0&lt;'\ Ham·s. :1H. sti ll kC'rps up with pop music and says her
cu JTPnl ldvorlt rs are Prince ("There's no one likr him" ).
Dwight Yoak um . t" l 'vC' alway had a country streak") and U2
i lPa d slngN "Bono Is say in g relative, important things").
TOM CRUISES TO 14TH-PLACE FINISH: Tom Cruise's
racin g dr&gt;but was hardl y flawless but he dl&lt;l m anage to finish
14th In a 'l·l-car field at thC' Road Atlanta race.
Crui se's Inexperience was obvious in the telev ision cove rage
as hC' bum ped first one car, then another and spun out on one of
thr coursr's less difficult turns. Cruise also had probl em s
gPtt in g hi s Nissa n .100 ZX r efuelPd du r ing his 97 laps around the
2.~2 - mll e coursr.

Kay Hem slry, George A. Wya nt .
Nelda June Wya nt to Tuppers
Plalns -ChC's ter Wat er Di strict,
right of wa y , Sa lisbury .
Richard D . Buzza rd to TP -C
Water District. Sutton . right of
way .
Eva L. Brntley . Willi am S.
BC'ntley to TP -CWD . Right of
wa y, Bedford .
C. Thoma s Hamm . Linda
Hamm to TPCWD . Su tt on, r / w .
Eula Proffitt to TPCWD, Ri ght
of wa y, LC'banon .
Elmer Harmon. Francis Har mon to Columbi a Gas of Ohio.
Inc .. Columbia Gas Tra ns. Corp ..
agrC'emr nt a nd rasC'me nt .
Rutland .
DC'lbert Smith, Ruth Smit h to
Co lumbia Ga s of Ohio. inc ..
Co lumbi a Gas Trans. Corp ..
Suit 1111
ag r ee m C' nl and easC' m ent .
IO: illl .ml ll l l• n~&gt;lt . Hc•bC'cca .J .
Sutton.
Hnu&gt;li to TP ( · IV ai&lt;' I' Dis tri ct,
Ca rl Nottingham to Columbi a
11ght 11 1 11' ,1\', Sii ltlln.
Ga
s of Ohio inc .. Co lumbia Ga s
M&lt;ll 1 .I I ..JII'I't'IH'I', \ harlrs R.
Trans. Corp., agreement and
Llll'l't'nt·t• In Tl' C WatC'I' Di s·
easemrnt , ChrstCI'.
trl&lt;- 1. r iglil of 11':1 1' , I.Pbanon.
Evelyn A. Ga ul , dec.. to
Fr.llil' II' l' tll'lf'r .. Jr ., Mary
Gaya
nn G. Ga ul. Richard E .
l'ortt •l to Tl' l · 1\'alrr Dis tric t.
CC'r t. of trans., Salisbury.
Gaul,
r i l~ hl uf 11';1\· , S111ton .
Evelyn A. Ga ul , dec.. to
li&lt;'nr v E. l'h •I.Jnd .. lr .. l&lt;athy
Ri chard E . Gaul. cert. of trans..
Cll'i&lt;IIHI to Tl' C \\'att&gt;r Distric t.
ChestN .
ri ghl of 11':!\' . 0111'!'.
EvC'Iyn A. Gaul. dec., by
Dais~ Cdlht' l inr t'artr r. Rl .
executor
. to Gaya nn Clay. par('ltard l'rl's tml Cartl'r to TP -C
cels. Sallsbury / ChC'ster .
IVatrr lll,tri&lt; t. 1lghl of wa y,
Harold Henrichse n. aka HaOiil'l •.
rold A., aka Harold Angus. drc ..
Holllt• n lll' nlsh•y, M r l &lt;~ ni C'

Ar thur Cr;JbtrPr, Char les Ar thur C' rabt rPr . Wes t ina Cra btrc•t\ L aura Wrstlna Cra btree' to
Dona ld Cri!btrr&lt;·. Barbara Crab! n•e, ri ght of wa y rase ment,
\n lumhla.
.loyc&lt;' A. Bl akr to Har old 1..
Wllli ;ml s. nronwvn A. Williams.
pl. lol. Middleport.
.1&lt;'"~' .1. C;nTo ll. Anna L ~
r·:moll tn llarry S. Yarbrough!,
parcl'i . Scipio.
l·.ul d l'r olfilt to Tuppers
Pl,lill' l'll('strr Watrr Di stri ct,
1ldll of,,..,, 1 ~ 1 . l.ciJi! non .
llt'illl l 'u llills. Vicky Pullins to
l'uppt•rs l'l.lin' Cht&gt;stC'r WatC'r
Jli slrit ·t. ri ght otway, Lf'ba non.
llt•ll n · A. S.!l sr r. Ca rolyn
S.il spr l.o Tuppt ·rs Pli!l ns-Chesier
Walt•r llisl l'it't . r ight of way.

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
Ou June 9. 1987. '" the
M c•g•
Co&lt;u&lt; ly
Probalo
Court Cnse No 255 42,
Gu01gc J Korn . Jr .. 302
Wnnhl Strenl , Pomeroy.
Ohio 45769. wns nppoinl od

racusa. Meigs County, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judgo
Lena K. Nessetroad. Clerk
161 16. 23. 30. 3tc

Quote of the day

to Frances L. Davis, cert. of
tra ns.. Middleport.
Dal e W. Hill. Amy R. Hill to
ITT Fin . Serv. -Com . Div .. sheriff' s sa le, Sutton.
James Junor Spaun, M ar ie
Spaun to Fred B . Sayre. Verna R.
SayrC', parcel. Ra cine vi ll age.
Jac k Carsey to Donald William
M ayer, Linda L. M ayrr. pt. lots.
Pomeroy v illage .
Donald Lron PooiC'r and Barbara J a nC' Poo i C'r. entr y,
Chestrr.
Ra y R. Pi ckens. Patty Ann
Pickens to Gary Lee BatC's.
Linda L ou BatC's, 2.57 acres.
ChC'sler .
Vina BailC'y. dec. to RC' th a Day,
David Howa rd Barnhouse. Rose
Ellen Barnh ouse. CE'r tlfl ca tC' .
Olivr.
Retha Day, David H. Barn house. Tonya Barnhou se'. Rosr
Ell en BarnhousE' to Char lrs L.
Harris. Shirley J. Harris. 1. 2
acrC', OlivC'.
Clinton E. John son, df'c .. to
Ethel A. Coza rt. fka E th el A.
Johnson, affid avi t. L ebanon .
Donald G. Stra uss. dec .. to Uli a
B. Strauss. affid av it . Letart.
James B . O'Brien, Roberta C.
O'Brien to Steven F . Ba loy.
Rebecca L. Baloy , lots. Pomeroy
v illa ge.
Karen Ilene Lovf' to Larry
Roger Love. decree of divorce.
Salem.

Paul T . Imboden. Gale Imboden to Federal Nationfll Mtg.
Assoc ., sheriff's deed, Syracuse
village.
Linda K. Persons to ,Bett y
Per son s Mer ce r . par ce l ,
Ches ter.
Denver R. Person s to Brtt y
P erso n s Mer ce r . par ce l ,
Chester.
Terry L. Wolfe. Deborah Wolfe
to Deborah Wolfe. parcel, Sutt on.
Gladys Robson , dec .. to Paul
E. Kloes, affidavit, Sutton.
Ri chard Kevin Dall ey to Geoffrey Ward, parcel, Rutland .
U.S.A. Farmf'rs Home Adm . .'
to JC'rry T. Johnston. 1.00 A ..
Bedford .
Jeffrey S. Werry . Ruby J.
Werry to Carl L. Wolfe. parcel.
Rutland .
Paul A. Honaker. Jr., Kathleen
L. Honaker to Mark Simpson.
Regina Simpson, lot. Middleport.
E lsie J . Poolrr. dec .. Roy H:
Pooler. Norma Jra n Sf'xson .
affidavit. Chester .
Norma Jea n Sexson to Hanson
B. Buckley , 1.01 acre , Chester.
Richard D. CartC'r, Helen G.
Carter. Rich ard P. Carter, Daisy
Carter to Monongahela Power
Co., Easement. Olive.
George J . Korn, Sr. , dec.;
George J . Korn . Jr .. affidavit,
Pomeroy vi llage.
Todd Bissell to Charles F.
Powell. Estheria M. Powell, 1

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On June 10, 1987, in the
Meigs
County Probate
Court, Case No. 26,607,
Thelma Louise Ruthem, 112
Lincoln Avenue, Mingo
Junction 4393B, was appointed executrix of the estate of Frankie Alice Mu·
maw. deceased. tote of Sy-

When you- us. wt'l be
IIIII . .. with prompt, con-.

c:emec1 i11S1nnCe 18Mce. Wt
llwlyS .., 10 be flllnds you
can cltplnd on. Cll • tlldly.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687
State Auto
lnsunrnce

Co111panift

1987 SCHEDULE

FLEA MARKET

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR GROUNDS
POMEROY, OHIO

JULY 2-3-4-5; AUG . 6-7- 8-9
SEPT. 3-4-5- 6; OCT. 1-2-3-4
NOV. 5-6-7-8

DEALERS WANTED - BUYERS WANTED
COME ONE - COME All

Reasonable Set-up Rates-Indoor Spate-Outdoor Space ,
.

We'll See You at the FLEA MARKET

For Information Call: 304 422-4169-(614) 742-2882

__,.......-,. ·.

WHY ARE FUNERALS IMPORTANT?

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On June 24. 1987, in the
Meigs County Probate Court
, Case No. 26664, Patricia
Suchoze, 116 Ctearvlew
Drive, McMurray, Pa.: Carolyn Podbeaek. 8916 Traitwood Court. Mentor, Ohio:
Phyllis May. 33137 HyHtl
Run, Pomeroy, Ohio, and
Robert P. Meier. 298008
Bradbury Road. Middleport.
Ohio. were eppointed Co-Ex·
ecutora of the 01tata of Ber·
nadine S. Meier. deceued.
tate of 113 Wehe Terrace.
Pomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio, 46769.
Robert E . Buck.
Probete Judge
lena K. Ne11elroad, Clerk
(6) 30: (7) 7, 14. 3tc

acrE'. Lebanon .
Ernie KC'nton Davi s to Ohio
Power Company, right of way,
Salem .
Harry R. Mozingo, Bcrtina
Mozingo to Ohio Power co., right
of way, Rutland .
Michael A. Mitchell. Teressa S.
Mitchell. to Ohio Power Com pany, right of way . Rutland .
J. B . O'Brien, Robert a O'Brien
to Ohio Power Co mpany, right of
way. Sutton .
Gary Chevalier, Marth a ChC'·
valier to GarflC'Id A. Stewart, .14
ac re . Olivr.
Fred B . Hill, Annalu Hill to
George H . Ingles, Bonita Ingles.
36.91 acres. Scipio.
Amos Tillis, Ruth L. Tillis to
John W. Brogan. Sr., Wlldo I .
Brogan, parcel, Rutland .

'

Adminis t rator of th e es tat e

of Goorqo J Korn , Sr., decensed, late of 19 Ann ·street
Pmoroy, Ohio 45769.
·
Roberl E Buck,
Probate Judge
Leua K Nesselroad, Clerk
16) 16. 23. 30, 31c

about the giant seafarers.
·'Whatever we do is going to be
a success," Prescott told The
New York Times. "It may not be
the result we des ire.
·'If they are no I accepted by the
pod and they can't find their way,
they may die, but we wlil get
valuable information about what
we should do for stranded animals later."
Notch, the first whale released,
knocked loose his radio transmitter, but could still be identified by
a chemical painted on his
flippers, Goldfarb said.
Another calf wearing the highfrequency radio transmitters
will be tracked for about a
month, wh ile the third was fitted
with a sa tellite tag that will allow
researchers to track It for six
months, Goldfarb said.
The whales' chances of survival would increase if they joined
the pod, researchers said.
"I don't believe they have
really joined the pod , but they are
staying to get her ," Goldfarb
sa id . " E ven if they don't join a
. pod, the three of them seem to
have joined together and formed
a pod .
" They met up with a group of
whit e-s ided dolphins and behaved appropria tely. They exhibited play behavior. They would
turn on their backs and were
sw imming about. "
The whales were last spotted
Monday night about 12 miles
from where they wer e released,
Goldfarb sa id.
Scientists sa id each time the
tra nsmission signal was interrupt ed, they knew the whales had
gone underwater .
"Their diving has increased,
which is a good sign. It shows
they are strong and they are
swimming normally," Goldfarb
said. "They are relating to other
animals in the environment.
Th ey are r eally demonstrating
really natural behaviors."
The mammals had received a
final examination and been given
ster oids and antibiotics to help
ensure their health, Goldfarb
sai d.
The whales, now about 2 years
old , weigh 800 to 1,200 pounds and
range In length from around 9
feet to 11 feet.

h important to rKognilt that fuftlfall an for tht lifing.
'The tlt&lt;eand can no 1engtr rKiin SUJIIIOI't from his miMirn·
en. So why is it important for fritnch to pay their respects
·at fulllfal senicn?
deint 10 they art rltlffirming their fritnchhip with tht
whi&lt;h hat lost olm4 one. noPU NEED l'tOPll, on4
h nllt - • important in timt of crhis, lib tht
'l'
of a Jew141 - ·
loth ,.,_, sinlply lly
twchts tht ll"s of - y
1 ether pttp1t 111141 rilatitmhips dnelof which han lottmg - ... - efhcts. The iwMfll c.-.y is 1 way to ._troll tht
slrtft9th of thltt relllialllhipt. te shew tht s..,.... that o
•. , .'
•it•lnt family so
·~
, ':..
'' --:~-=
. ly shtwlnt that they, teo, ore maurnlnt tht lots of o friend. -;; -~ , lilt ssllnr•s klolt cllllf.._
t tetht family. lur_~!.~t141ht
.• llec- Jlthter; tht l.ner11 n 0111 way to help """"""":
family's pl. .
At
direden. we c• help plan funeral ""!"s as
proptf tMniOI iah for tht tlt&lt;.-d. •d attht somet"'" al·
law frieR4s to help tht nlllt carry 011. 1'1ttne call or stop by
if you wish te ~s eur senkts.

,_.119

h...

.,..,ely _._

f!l~&amp;-~-~~
!T~ .it"" .

:;.:

Ill_..

5TH STREET
(614) 667-3110
COOLVIllE. OHIO

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